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What I want to do when I grow up?

What I want to do when I grow up?. How does someone choose a career path or career transition? Interests? Skills and talents? Personality? Many tests exist to measure these and more (confidence in one’s skills, perception of career barriers, dysfunctional career thoughts, etc.)

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What I want to do when I grow up?

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  1. What I want to do when I grow up? • How does someone choose a career path or career transition? • Interests? • Skills and talents? • Personality? • Many tests exist to measure these and more (confidence in one’s skills, perception of career barriers, dysfunctional career thoughts, etc.) INTERESTS = fairly stable over time (solidified at age 15)

  2. Help selecting a job • Interests are characteristics of personality • Interest inventories • 1st: Carnegie Interest Inventory • 2 big names: • Edward K. Strong Jr. • G. Fredric Kuder Most widely used: • Strong Vocational Interest Blank (1927) • Now Campbell Interest and Skill Survey = currently most widely used in research and practice • Kuder Preference Survey (1939)

  3. Genealogy STRONG • 1927:Strong Vocational Interest Blank (SVIB)-Men • 1933: Strong Vocational Interest Blank (SVIB)-Women • 1974, 1981: Strong-Campbell Interest Inventory (SCII) • 1985:Strong Interest Inventory (SII) Form T325 • 1994:Strong Interest Inventory (SII) Form T317 KUDER • 1934:Kuder Preference Record-Vocational • 1963:Kuder General Interest Survey (KGIS), Form E • 1966:Kuder Occupational Interest Survey (KOIS),Form D • 1985:Kuder Occupational Interest Survey (KOIS),Form DD • 1999: Kuder Career Search with Person Match (KCS)

  4. Traditional Approaches Originally, these 2 tests of vocational interest differ in 2 main ways: • Origin of scaled scores: • Empirical (Criterion-group) vs deductive (broad areas) • Item format: Absolute (likert – like, dislike, indifferent) vs relative

  5. Strong: SVIB (early versions) • 400 items, likes of dislikes related to occupations and leisure activities. • Items weighted on frequency in particular occupation relative to general population • # occupations: Men: 54; Women: 32 • N = ~300 per occupation • Mean = 50; SD = 10

  6. Strong: SVIB (early versions) • Reliability: .80s to .90s (split half and short test-retest) • Long term test-retest .60 • Pattern of interest remains stable over 22 years • Validity: good prediction of job satisfaction • Criticisms: Gender bias and atheoretical

  7. Strong: SCII • Addressed gender bias (single form) • Theoretical: Holland’s 6 personality factors based on interests

  8. Holland’s RIASEC (1959, 1966, 1997)

  9. Strong: SCII • 325 items • 7 types: • Occupations • school subjects • Activities • Amusements • types of people • preference between two activities • your characteristics

  10. Strong: SCII • Scores: • Section 1: General Occupational Themes (Holland) • Section 2: admin (to avoid test admin,or scoring errors) • Section 3: Summary of basic interests (e.g., science, athletics, sales) relative to overall population • T-scores (M=50, SD=10) • Section 4: scores relative to each occupation and to 6 general themes (overall pop) • From very dissimilar to very similar • New 1994: personal style scale: work style, leadership style, learning env., risk taking.

  11. Strong: SII • Norms: 109 occupations (some divided by sex) • Recruitment? • 25yo, >3yrs, satisfied, typical tasks • Reliability: • Internal consistency: .80s-.90s • Test-retest: .80s-.90s *However, no reliability data for the admin.scores • Validity: • Predictive versus concurrent • Good evidence (half cases followed for 3-18yrs end up in consistent field) • But what about the other half? • Several studies based on previous versions

  12. Kuder:KOIS • 100 triads of alternative activities • Pick the most preferred and least preferred • 30 minutes • Data on 10 general occupation interests • Current version is also criterion-based • Occupation: • Criteria: employed in the area for 3yrs min and be satisfied • 109 occupational groups (33 men+women, 32 men only, 11 female only--- covers 76 occupations) • College major: • Criteria: college seniors satisfied with major • 26 college major groups (14 men+women, 8 men only, 4 female only--- covers 40 majors)

  13. Kuder: KOIS • Scores/Report: • contrast to all different occupations and majors • 6 sections (Example p464): • Dependability of the results (statement) • Vocational Interest Estimates: Rank order (%ile) interest patterns relative to norms of men and women separately • Outdoor, mechanical, computational, scientific, persuasive, artistic, literary, musical, social service, clerical • OCCUPATIONS***: rank order of occupational groups with most similar pattern of interests • COLLEGE MAJOR • Experimental scale (includes “Fake good” used for dependability) • RIASEC codes

  14. Kuder: KOIS • Norms: • groups formed from 1960s to 1990s • Attempted to get n=200 for each group (but 20 occ.and some majors <200) • Reliability: • Internal consistency (KR-20): .47 to .85 • Test-retest (short): .80-.95 • Stable over 30yrs • Validity • Predictive: 50% worked in suggested field (test taking in high school) • Closer correspondence interests-field in College graduate HOWEVER: most studies from the 1970s

  15. Last points on interest tests • Generalizations about interest measures • Interest pattern quite reliable (stable), but not perfect • Respectable degree of validity (although overlap between group is not addressed, only differences) • Old-fashioned psychometrically (item response theory, etc.) • Users are satisfied, even if serious flaws are pointed out! (not high-stakes) • Gender bias: direct individuals in gender-typed careers

  16. Last points on interest tests • Vocational interest is not success • Only compares to people satisfied • Only measure of success = not fired after 3 yrs • Must consider other factors, such as match of skills to job and ability • Jagger et al. 1992: • Good match between aptitude in high school and current job = good evaluation by employer 8yrs later • Interest in high school did not predict job satisfaction or performance 8yrs later • Add confidence, self-efficacy, personnality measures…

  17. The human side of science: what is the archetypal researcher personality? (just for fun!) http://www.labonline.com.au/science/feature_article/item_032005b.asp Science Advisory Board (international community of more than 23,000 life science and medical professionals). Question: Are there some personalities that are better suited than others to a scientific career in life science? • Adapted the methodologies of various personality tests and used a detailed questionnaire specifically designed to reflect the unique aspects of scientists' interests, values, motives and opinions. • 76 questions, describe their behaviour when making a decision, searching for information, reacting to change and interacting with others.

  18. The human side of science: what is the archetypal researcher personality? (just for fun!)

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