Career decision-making difficulties among career-decided college students |
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Authors: | Consuelo Arbona Weihua Fan Marcel A. de Dios Norma Olvera |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychological, Health, and Learning Sciences, University of Houston, Houston, Texas, USA |
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Abstract: | The procedures developed by Gati and colleagues to interpret scores in the Career Decision Difficulties Questionnaire were implemented to examine difficulties’ profiles among self-identified decided college students who reported being either comfortable or uncomfortable with their career choice. Of the 583 participants, 92.5% were career decided and 7.5% were undecided. Close to half (47.2%) of the career-decided students self-identified as uncomfortable with their career choice and reported similar career decision-making difficulties as their undecided peers. The most salient difficulties among decided uncomfortable students were general indecisiveness and lack of knowledge regarding occupations and the decision-making process. Greater difficulties related to lack of knowledge about oneself, and internal conflicts predicted membership in the decided uncomfortable group versus the decided comfortable group. Results indicated that career-decided students are not a homogenous group. Implications of the findings for career counseling with decided uncomfortable college students are discussed. |
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Keywords: | career decided career decision comfort college students decision-making difficulties |
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