CAREER
PLANNING LESSON INFORMATION HELP ADVICE LEARNING WORK CAREERS EMPLOYMENT
SAMPLE EXAMPLE PRACTICE BUSINESS LIFE SKILLS
Learn about
work, careers and career planning.
CAREER PLANNING INTRODUCTION LESSON
It is said that most people
change careers at least three
times in their lifetimes. That
might sound overwhelming, but
consider that it covers everyone
in this country – from folks
with a high school education or
less to those with a PhD; from
those in business management to
those teaching graduate classes
at top universities. It includes
part-time and full-time workers;
it includes those who work in a
traditional office setting and
those who work in nontraditional
locations. It even covers those
who work for others vs. those
who are self-employed.
Because career planning today
offers such a wide variety of
occupational choices, it would
take a complete lesson for each
possible job to give you a full
picture. That’s why, in this
series of lessons on careers,
we’ll offer an overview of some
of the most popular choices.
We’ll try to clarify the
differences between educational
preparation needed for specific
areas, disciplines, and even
occupations.
CAREER
PLANNING
Now, some career planning tools
and questions are consistent
throughout the labor market:
those are the ones we’ll cover
in this lesson. The common theme
is to determine which occupation
is right for you! They involve
ways to gather information about
potential choices, ways to
gather information about
yourself and your likes,
dislikes, and aptitude, and
general ways to approach career
planning.
LEARNING ABOUT YOURSELF
One of the first pitfalls that
people fall into when planning a
career is to start out with the
careers instead of with
themselves. As we all know, most
of us can easily fool ourselves
into believing certain things –
often about our own
personalities, attitudes,
aptitudes, and characters. If
you start with specific careers,
you might end up narrowing your
choices based on various
opinions such as what you THINK
you are good at, rather than
what you actually ARE good at.
So make sure to start your
career planning by better
understanding yourself: your own
needs, likes, dislikes, goals,
plans, character, personality,
and so on. Throughout the entire
process, make sure to remember
that life has a way of changing
our best plans. You might begin
training or education, take a
class for fun, and find that
your love for the new subject
changes your plans. Or you might
fall in love and get married,
knowing that years of medical
school, internships, and
residency programs might not be
the best thing for your new
relationship.
To start the process, then, ask
yourself some basic questions
about YOU:
What is your current life
situation? If you choose a
career that requires
additional education, would
you need to work as well?
Full or part-time? Will you
soon be looking after
babies, children, or even
elderly parents that might
require more time than some
occupations will allow?
What are your general plans
in life: marriage, big
family, no children, freedom
to travel, early retirement,
etc.? What income range
would be acceptable to
fulfill those goals?
What are your personal
values or ethics? For
example, are you religious?
Do you care tremendously
about the environment? Do
children always come first?
Are the underprivileged
classes near and dear to
your heart?
How do people fit your work
style preferences? That is,
do you prefer to work alone
or in groups? Do you like
dealing with people or do
you wish they would all go
away and leave you alone to
get your work done? Are
coworkers okay, but you
dislike dealing with the
general public?
Are you more traditional and
prefer structure or do you
like surprise and variety?
For example, would
self-employment be an option
for you? Do you want
consistent daily activities
that you can learn and
become expert at or do you
prefer constant change and
learning new things?
What are you good at vs.
what subjects seem to
immediately construct a
mental block in your brain
the minute you even think
about them?
Once you have answered these
questions, rate them from the
most important to the least. Far
too many people choose something
less important as their main
criteria in a career planning
search. The most common one is
pay. Of course we are all
impressed with visions of dollar
signs, but be realistic – if you
want to be able to take time off
whenever you want during hunting
season in the Autumn, you
probably don’t want to go into
teaching, where Autumn is the
beginning of new school year. If
spending time with family and
friends is very important in
your life, you probably don’t
want to be an Accountant during
the first few months of the year
or a Biomedical Engineer who
will need to spend long hours in
the lab.
You can use many different
resources for answering some of
these questions – don’t just
depend upon your own judgment,
although that’s always the place
to start. Remember, we often
fool ourselves into believing
things about ourselves that
aren’t quite true. For a more
accurate answer, consider asking
friends, family, and current and
previous coworkers about what
you are like, and try out some
aptitude tests at the local
community college or university.
You can also find many of these
for free at different websites,
but take the results from
various websites with a grain of
salt. The more formal testing at
colleges is likely to be more
accurate because the personnel
have probably been trained in
the area of counseling and
testing and the tests themselves
are standardized and have been
through many revisions cycles to
make them the best they can be.
After you have determined what
you need and want out of a
career, THEN begin investigating
some of your possible choices to
see how well they match.
LEARNING ABOUT CAREERS
NOW you can make a list of some
of your potential choices, and
begin to investigate each one –
ask the same types of questions
about the career as you did of
yourself. Also consider how the
field is changing, as well as
some basic questions that are
pretty common to most
occupations, such as pay scale
and arena.
One important point to consider
with any potential career is how
it is changing over time. Modern
“marvels” have changed the face
of much the labor market, the
most obvious being technology,
computers, and the Internet. The
Age of Information has not only
opened new career and
occupational choices, it has
impacted virtually every career
available today. Knowledge of
standard computer operations
such as word processing,
spreadsheets, email, and the
Internet have become decidedly
soft job skills as opposed to
hard ones these days. Assisting
in the creation of a global
economy, the Internet has also
provide astounding opportunities
for “virtual” offices and
outsourcing that were never
before possible. Similarly,
technology has changed the face
of communication completely, and
speed has become one of the key
goals of customer service as a
result.
To begin the investigation
process on career choices,
understand that “career” is a
broader term that includes many
specific “occupations” within
each one. Each career might
include several disciplines,
levels, or both. For example,
Engineering careers fall within
many disciplines such as
Chemical, Nuclear, Aeronautic,
etc. Another important point to
consider about any potential
career is whether you would
prefer to specialize in a
particular discipline or attain
cross-training and become
multidisciplinary. Again, it all
depends upon two things: how
well the career, disciplines,
and occupations you are
considering match your needs and
how well you will be able to fit
the needs of the labor market. A
multidisciplinary approach
allows you more opportunities
and variety, but do keep in mind
that, usually, it also requires
more education.
Careers also include different
levels of educational
requirements. Again, using
Engineering as an example, most
actual engineers have a minimum
of a four-year university
degree, but designers, drafters,
technicians, and so on might
have received their educations
at trade schools or even through
on-the-job training. And that’s
not even considering tangent
occupations and careers such as
Quality Control Specialists or
management. Interestingly,
various “lower” levels in
certain disciplines and careers
are paid as much – and sometimes
more than – what are commonly
considered “upper” levels. So
don’t automatically assume
anything about a particular
occupation or career.
Investigate it, instead – you
might be surprised at the
opportunities, and you might
realize a way to create your own
innovative niche!
The rest of the lessons in this
series should give you some
basic places from which to
start. We try to give an
overview of the above elements
for various common careers and
occupations. Make sure to ask
questions about each possible
occupation that will shed light
on how they might affect the
most important criteria you
determined when learning about
yourself. Let’s try to group the
questions you might ask about a
particular occupation into
categories:
Labor Arena – Here you want
to find out what areas are
available in which to work:
government, business and
industry, and teaching are
the most common.
Remuneration – In this group
of questions, you should see
what the standard pay scales
are, as well as elements
such as whether benefits,
advancement opportunities,
or horizontal shifts (to
management, sales, etc.) are
available.
Atmosphere – these are many
of the same questions you
asked yourself: does it
allow both working for
others and being
self-employed? Is it people
or paper oriented? What are
the day-to-day activities
like? Are a lot of travel or
long hours required? Will
you be inside or outside?
Now, hopefully, you are on the
final leg of figuring out some
viable choices for a career.
Take the most important items
from your own list and compare
them to the information you have
found out about the various
career and occupational choices
you investigated. FIND THE
MATCHES! And then gain more
knowledge about those.
Ways to gain experience and
knowledge about potential
matches are usually pretty easy
to find:
Public Information – Most
colleges have very detailed
occupational guides, but you
can also find a wide range
of information and detail
online and in magazines. For
example, U.S. News and World
Report puts out a yearly
guide as to pay scales that
can be expected for that
year’s college graduates in
a variety of fields.
Shadow – Find someone
actually performing the
occupation you are
interested in and gain
permission to follow them
throughout a typical day.
This works even better if
you can extend it through a
full week or two.
internships – Especially in
the government arena, unpaid
internships are quite common
venues for gaining
experience in a particular
occupation while
investigating it. However,
business and industry has a
wide range of internships as
well.
Apprenticeships – Don’t
forget that many established
Masters in trade fields will
offer apprenticeships to
people wanted to learn more
about that specific trade.
One of the benefits of this
route is that often they are
paid positions.
Volunteer Work – Never
overlook the possibilities
of volunteering within the
general career area that you
are considering. The
possibilities are virtually
endless!
For
teaching and learning business education, general money skills, personal finance,
and life skills, please go to the Money
Instructor home page.
Career Planning Lesson
Information Advice Test
High School College
Assessment Workshop kit
- Pre resume preparation
- High School Students -
Secondary education -
Adults - Special
Education - Teens -
Teenagers - Kids Free
Instruct - Thematic Unit
- Children - Secondary
Education - Middle
School - Young Adults -
Classroom Review -
Career Education