[NIFL-FAMILY:1778] Re: Paper copies of new ERIC Digests

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Subject: [NIFL-FAMILY:1778] Re: Paper copies of new ERIC Digests
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Career Development: A Shared Responsibility
ERIC Digest No. 201
Bettina Lankard Brown
1998

With the workplace in a seemingly constant state of transition, independence
and self-sufficiency have been promoted as the stabilizing factor in the quest
for employment security. Concepts of career resilience, self-reliance, free
agency, and flexible work arrangements all focus on the theme of assuming
responsibility for one s work life. This perspective moves "control" of
employment into the negotiating hands of both employers and employees.

One of the biggest challenges today s employers face is creating an
organization that attracts and keeps talented people (Pink 1997). In greatest
demand are qualified workers who will share responsibility for achieving the
company s goals and objectives workers who will work with the enthusiasm and
dedication of shareholders in the company enterprise. In this environment, the
focus is on challenge, reward, and satisfaction. This Digest examines ways in
which the changing workplace has altered the roles of workers. It also
discusses ways in which career development efforts can be updated to prepare
individuals for work in this new environment.

A Balance of Power

Eliminating "co-dependent" behavior has become as important for employment
health as it is for psychological well-being. Today s workers are realizing
that the only source of employment security is the security they create for
themselves, by becoming self-reliant and career resilient (Brown 1996).
Continued employment is tied to lifelong learning and ongoing skill
development, practices that enhance career growth and the potential for career
advancement and mobility. This trend toward career independence is
reflected in
the new breed of independent contractors and temporary workers who move from
job to job and project to project, marketing themselves for temporary
assignments in a variety of organizations rather than seeking permanent jobs.
When the self-employed are counted, these "free agents" comprise more than 16%
of the U.S. population, roughly 25 million people who are continually
marketing
their skills, abilities, and achievements to realize their employment goals
(Pink 1997).

Workers are recognizing the need to ensure their marketability to employers,
and employers are facing increased pressure to make their organizations
attractive to workers. In the current tight labor market, where workers 
remember job loss as an outcome of corporate restructuring and downsizing,
company loyalty has gone by the wayside. Brown (1998a) reports that even newly
hired workers are on the lookout for a "better" opportunity, with 50-60% of
them changing jobs within the first 7 months of employment. To offset
excessive
turnover, many companies are offering advantages associated with free agency
(Reich 1998): "flexibility in how, when, and where you work; compensation
linked to what you contribute; freedom to move from project to project."

This shared responsibility for employment has resulted in the evolution of
various partnership arrangements. Formal employment contracts, which are
designed to satisfy the needs of both employers and employees, are being
developed through collective bargaining and contain employment stipulations
that are agreeable to both parties (Brown 1997). Through such contracts,
"employers provide the opportunities, tools, and support to help employees
develop their skills and maintain their employability; the employees have the
responsibility of managing their careers by taking advantage of the
opportunities they are given" (ibid., p. 1).

What are the implications of this shared responsibility? Today s workers must
be entrepreneurial. They must function as free agents, marketing themselves
and
the skills they can offer to employers who serve as "customers."

How Can Career Development Programs Be Updated? 

Career development programs, although continuing to focus on career awareness,
exploration, and development, must be updated to contain strategies for
employment in the 21st century.

Make Career Awareness 
an Ongoing Process

Career awareness is not a preemployment activity, but rather one that must be
ongoing throughout employment. "In a knowledge-based economy, the new coin of
the realm is learning" (Reich 1998). Workers must continually search for new
ways to learn skills that will facilitate their continued employability, e.g.,
"versatility, flexibility, creativity, self-direction, interpersonal and
communication skills, facility with computer and information technology,
ability to learn continuously, and ability to manage work, time, and money"
(Kerka 1997, p. 1).

Career awareness efforts must highlight the new role of workers as free
agents,
responsible for the development, application, and marketing of their
skills. As
employees, these workers must be "willing to change; provide a shared
vision which is inspirational; be willing to facilitate others to act; win
respect of fellow workers and from their places of employment; and project a
commitment and attitude of enthusiasm that will cause organizations to retain
them" (Mosca 1997, p. 57). 

The trend toward spirituality in the workplace is indicative of the need for
individuals to find work that has meaning and value to them and that affords
them an opportunity to satisfy their needs for contribution and community
(Imel
1998). As Reich (1998) notes, companies are learning that money alone will not
enable them to attract, keep, and make teams out of talented people. "Talented
people want to be part of something that they can believe in, something that
confers meaning on their work and on their lives." Career awareness programs
must alert individuals to the importance of self-fulfillment and to strategies
for assessing whether or not an organization espouses the "kind of mission
that
offers people a chance to do work that makes a difference" (ibid). As noted by
Mosca (1997),  "an individual s true wealth will be centered and manifest
itself as an inner self-trust, an awareness of self-belief," and a feeling of
fulfillment (p. 57).

Highlight Career Management Skills 
in Career Exploration

New career exploration practices that include school-to-work initiatives such
as internships, apprenticeships, and worksite experiences are valuable ways
for
students to learn about work in a specific occupational area. Those who are
already working can expand their experiences through various types of
continuing education and work force education programs. 

Because the workplace of the 21st century will be "characterized by many
complex, tactical, and strategic tasks that require the assimilation of
increasing amounts of new knowledge; personal thinking, application, and
problem-solving abilities; and high work loads with extremely variable content
. . . , senior management must acknowledge work force education as the driving
activity that supports quality management and the work-team empowerment
process" (Gordon 1997, p. 15). Mosca (1997) notes that employees need training
"to infuse creativity into their jobs, be able to tolerate ambiguity, and
accept responsibility and accountability for their work" (p. 53).

Whether developed through work force or school-based career development
programs, the tools for success in today s highly competitive workplace
include
self-awareness, assertiveness, conflict resolution, interpersonal
communications, and managing relationships (Cunanan and Maddy-Bernstein 1997).
Personality clashes between employees, often triggered by power issues, are
continuing to escalate in the workplace (Brown 1998b). USA Today reports that
bullying and browbeating behaviors are becoming a significant workplace
problem, undermining productivity and morale (Armour 1998). Career exploration
activities should highlight strategies for managing relationships, including
those that build self-esteem and promote an openness to different ways of
thinking and acting (Brown 1998b).

Connect Individuals to Technology
through Career Planning

The globalization of work, new technologies, and increasing numbers of jobs in
the service sector are expanding the boundaries of where work is performed.
Flavin (1997) reports that many workers are operating out of their homes and
from mobile offices and hotel rooms. However, the ability to function
independently from these locations requires workers to be self-motivated and
have outstanding problem-solving, abstract reasoning, and planning skills,
along with an attitude of persistence (Gordon 1997).

Career planning should involve all stakeholders in the worker s career and
engage those who can model new ways of functioning. For example, mentoring is
one strategy that can help new workers learn about an organization and its
culture (Kerka 1998). It is also an effective way to help workers upgrade
their
skills. Through a mentoring program at OnSite Technologies, for example,
less-experienced employees are paired with senior technical engineers to learn
about new technologies (Kaufmann 1998).

The Internet offers another tool for career planning. It is useful for
"educating yourself on job searches and career transitions, researching
prospective employers, tracking trends, making contacts with other people, and
identifying and generating professional opportunities" (Koonce 1997, p.
15). By
scanning the top stories in such newspapers as the New York
Times<http://www.nytimes.com> and USA Today <http://www.usatoday.com>, readers
can
learn about the trends and forces affecting workers. Other publications
such as
National Business Employment Weekly (http://www.nbew.com) offer information on
job hunting and career planning (ibid.). The Web has opened the door to vast
information resources for career planning.

Conclusion

Career development practices must reflect the employment trends and practices
of the workplace and support individuals in their efforts to develop the
knowledge, skills, and behaviors that will enable them to be successful. In
the
school setting, collaboration, articulation, and communication between
partnerships of parents, businesses, community organizations, teachers, and
other school personnel are key support elements (Cunanan and Maddy-Bernstein
1997). In the workplace, companies can help their employees toward career
growth by communicating opportunities that are available to them, mapping a
course of action, facilitating employee training and education, offering an
opportunity for employees to try out their new skills, and providing feedback
and assessment to guide ongoing career planning (Kaufmann 1998).

>From the individual perspective, understanding the factors that shape and
influence career choices "helps you see where you fit in the larger scheme of
things . . . and helps you develop a better sense of direction and control in
planning your life s work and future" (Farren 1998, p. 46). Workers can master
the new skills and competencies of career development in partnership with
employers, career educators, and counselors.

References

Armour, S. "Workplace Bullies on the Rise in U.S." USA Today: Career Center.
Latest News, September  9, 1998.

 Brown, B. L. Career Resilience. ERIC Digest No. 178. Columbus: ERIC
 Clearinghouse on Adult, Career, and Vocational Education, Center on Education
 and Training for Employment, the Ohio State University, 1996. (ED 402 474)

 Brown, B. L. The Future of Career Development. Myth and Realities. Columbus:
 ERIC Clearinghouse on Adult, Career, and Vocational Education, Center on
 Education and Training for Employment, the Ohio State University, 1997. (ED
417
 295)

 Brown, B. L. Career Mobility: A Choice or Necessity? ERIC Digest No. 191.
 Columbus: ERIC Clearinghouse on Adult, Career, and Vocational Education,
Center
 on Education and Training for Employment, the Ohio State University, 1998a.
(ED
 414 436)

 Brown, B. L. Conflict Management. Trends and Issues Alerts. Columbus: ERIC
 Clearinghouse on Adult, Career, and Vocational Education, Center on Education
 and Training for Employment, the Ohio State University, 1998b. (ED 417 291)

 Cunanan, E. S., and Maddy-Bernstein, C. Exemplary Career Guidance Programs
 1995: Secondary and Postsecondary. Berkeley: National Center for Research in
 Vocational Education, University of California, 1997. (ED 406 547)

 Farren, C. "Sailing the Good Ship Career." Training and Development 52, no. 2
 (February 1998): 42-48.

 Flavin, C. State of the Union. Working in the USA. Making a Living, Making a
 Difference.  Pomfret, CT: Study Circles Resource Center, 1997. (ED 413 455)

 Gordon, E. D. "The New Knowledge Worker." Adult Learning 8, no. 4
(March-April
 1997): 14-17.

 Imel, S. Spirituality in the Workplace. Trends and Issues Alerts. Columbus:
 ERIC Clearinghouse on Adult, Career, and Vocational Education, Center on
 Education and Training for Employment, the Ohio State University, 1998. 

 Kaufmann, A.J.C. "Managers Can Assist Employees in Charting Their Own
Course."
 InfoWorld 20, no. 28 (July 13, 1998): 99-100.
 <http://www.infoworld.com/cgi-bin/displayArchive.pl?/98/28/202-28.99.htm>

 Kerka, S. Will We All Be Portfolio Workers? Trends and Issues Alerts.
Columbus:
 ERIC Clearinghouse on Adult, Career, and Vocational Education, Center on
 Education and Training for Employment, the Ohio State University, 1997. (ED
414
 448)

 Kerka, S. New Perspectives on Mentoring. ERIC Digest No. 194. Columbus: ERIC
 Clearinghouse on Adult, Career, and Vocational Education, Center on Education
 and Training for Employment, the Ohio State University, 1998. (ED 418 249)

 Koonce, R. "Career Power: Using the Internet as a Career Planning Tool."
 Training and Development 51, no. 9 (September 1997): 15.

 Mosca, J. B. "The Restructuring of Jobs for the Year 2000." Public  Personnel
 Management 26, no. 1 (Spring 1997): 
43-60.

 Pink, D. H. "Free Agent Nation." Fast Company, no. 12 (December 1997): 131+. 
 <http://www.fastcompany.com/online/12/freeagent.html>

 Reich, R. B. "The Company of the Future." Fast Company, no. 19 (November
1998):
 124+. 
<http://www.fastcompany.com/online/19/comfuture.html>


Developed with funding from the Office of Educational Research and
Improvement,
U.S. Department of Education, under Contract No. RR93002001.  Opinions
expressed do not necessarily reflect the position or policies of OERI or the
Department.  Digests may be freely reproduced.




Judy Wagner  /   wagner.6@osu.edu  /  http://ericacve.org/
ERIC Clearinghouse on Adult, Career, and Vocational Education
1900 Kenny Road  /  Columbus OH 43210-1090
614/292-8625; 800/848-4815 (ext 2-8625);  FAX:614/292-1260



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