The Loss of a Professional Home and the Search for Career Adaptability: The Disequilibrium of Immigration

By Lorraine Godden

In July 2009, my family and I immigrated to Canada from England. As a woman in my forties, I had built a career in education in England where I felt I was making a useful contribution to society. My skills and experience were, it seemed, of value, and I had a sense of belonging within my professional environment. I felt I had achieved a professional home. Throughout the planning stages of immigration I looked forward with anticipation to the experience of working in a new, different educational milieu. One where I could use my existing expertise, embrace new challenges, and find an even greater sense of professional fulfillment. I greatly misjudged that in moving across the Atlantic; my professional home would be left behind.

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Job vs. Work: The Trend Toward Nontraditional Employment is Putting a New Spin on Conventional Careers

By Ron McGowan

When we look at how the majority of people earn a living, the 20th Century, in retrospect, was the century of the full-time, permanent job. The 21st Century, for an increasing number of people, will be the century of self-employment.

Recent figures show that, depending on the industry sector, 25 to 40 percent of the workforce is employed in nontraditional roles – as temps, part-timers, contract workers or self-employed consultants. And their numbers are growing.

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NCDA Conference: 100 Years of Inspiring Careers and Empowering Lives

By Bobbi Carter

“Best Conference I’ve been to!” If you joined us for the 2012 National Career Development Association’s Global Career Development Conference you’d probably agree. The 2012 NCDA Global Career Conference was held in Atlanta, GA, with record-breaking attendance numbers. We are anticipating the 2013 Conference in Boston to be no less – after all, it is our 100th year anniversary.

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Perseverance is the Key to Success

By Louisa Jewell

I have been studying positive psychology for almost eight years now and I have determined that the key to success is perseverance. Often times we only hear about highly successful people after they have become successful so we are unaware of their struggles to the top. For example, Donald Trump has filed for bankruptcy four times and it would take Shania Twain 18 years of singing in some pretty shady bars before releasing her first album. Researchers are starting to determine it is not talent or IQ or an Ivy-league school that guarantees success; it’s grit.

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Chaos Theory South of the 49th Parallel: One Woman’s Adventure

By Penny Freno

Just as learning opportunities are integral to the professional and personal lives of the clients our organizations support, ongoing learning is central to career practitioners’ professional growth and development. Many topics of interest to career educators can be explored through self-study, face-to-face workshops, conferences, in-service training and courses, a range of technologies (i.e. the Internet, video conferencing, webinars), and through social media networks and Twitter.

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BOOK REVIEW – Getting Ahead: Three Steps to Take Your Career to the Next Level

By Julia Lebedeva

Joel A. Garfinkle, Getting Ahead: Three Steps to Take Your Career to the Next Level (Hoboken, N.J.: Wiley, c2011)
This book focuses on three of the four building blocks of success – perception, visibility and influence (PVI). The use of three items is connected to the title, Three Steps to Take Your Career to the Next Level. Performance is not included, being one of the most highlighted topics in other publications. Developing perception, visibility and influence is an option and choice to which most professionals give little conscious attention. Working to increase PVI is more complex than going to business school and working towards an MBA because it is less structured. Getting Ahead is written as the step-by-step PVI model instructions that will ensure your future career success. PVI is not a degree, but should be taken as seriously as an MBA, PhD and other degrees, since mastering these factors are so important for career advancement. There are, however, several reasons why PVI is considered optional: it is not a part of any job description, and there will not be any direct payment for this work. In many cases, working on PVI may be confrontational and challenging. It can take individuals outside their comfort zones, and it involves risk taking. It takes a lot of courage and confidence to create an ideal PVI state. This book gives the PVI concept a structure. Reading this book leads to the start of making the commitment to implement as many of the ideas, concepts, tips, suggestions and insights shared by the author as possible. You also become a true believer in the concept. This resource is as motivational as it is instructional. We all are familiar with the classical theories of motivation as being conceptual: ERG Theory, McClelland’s Theory of Needs, Goal Setting Theory, Reinforcement Theory, Equity Theory of Motivation, Expectancy Theory of Motivation. This book is an additional practical tool to support these theories.

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