Life designing: A paradigm for career construction in the 21st century |
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Authors: | Mark L. Savickas Laura Nota Jerome Rossier Jean-Pierre Dauwalder Maria Eduarda Duarte Jean Guichard Salvatore Soresi Raoul Van Esbroeck Annelies E.M. van Vianen |
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Affiliation: | 1. Oakland University, USA;2. Kent State University, USA;1. Department of Psychology, University of Milan-Bicocca, Italy;2. Department of Education, University of Roma Tre, Italy;3. Department of Philosophy, Sociology, Education and Applied Psychology, University of Padova, Italy;1. Swiss National Centre of Competence in Research LIVES, University of Lausanne, Switzerland;2. Faculty of Business and Economics, University of Lausanne, Switzerland;3. Institute of Psychology, University of Lausanne, Switzerland |
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Abstract: | At the beginning of the 21st century, a new social arrangement of work poses a series of questions and challenges to scholars who aim to help people develop their working lives. Given the globalization of career counseling, we decided to address these issues and then to formulate potentially innovative responses in an international forum. We used this approach to avoid the difficulties of creating models and methods in one country and then trying to export them to other countries where they would be adapted for use. This article presents the initial outcome of this collaboration, a counseling model and methods. The life-designing model for career intervention endorses five presuppositions about people and their work lives: contextual possibilities, dynamic processes, non-linear progression, multiple perspectives, and personal patterns. Thinking from these five presuppositions, we have crafted a contextualized model based on the epistemology of social constructionism, particularly recognizing that an individual’s knowledge and identity are the product of social interaction and that meaning is co-constructed through discourse. The life-design framework for counseling implements the theories of self-constructing [Guichard, J. (2005). Life-long self-construction. International Journal for Educational and Vocational Guidance, 5, 111–124] and career construction [Savickas, M. L. (2005). The theory and practice of career construction. In S. D. Brown & R. W. Lent (Eds.), Career development and counselling: putting theory and research to work (pp. 42–70). Hoboken, NJ: Wiley] that describe vocational behavior and its development. Thus, the framework is structured to be life-long, holistic, contextual, and preventive. |
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