Career Adaptability: An Integrative Construct for Life‐Span, Life‐Space Theory
- 1 March 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Career Development Quarterly
- Vol. 45 (3) , 247-259
- https://doi.org/10.1002/j.2161-0045.1997.tb00469.x
Abstract
The four segments in the life‐span, life‐space approach to comprehending and intervening in careers (individual differences, development, self, and context), constitute four perspectives on adaptation to life roles. Adaptation serves as a bridging construct to integrate the complexity engendered by viewing vocational behavior from four distinct vantage points. To correspond to adaptation as the core construct, career adaptability should replace career maturity as the critical construct in the developmental perspective on adaptation. Moreover, adaptability could be conceptualized using developmental dimensions similar to those used to describe career maturity, namely planning, exploring, and deciding.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Toward an Expanded Definition of Adaptive Decision MakingThe Career Development Quarterly, 1997
- A Context‐Rich Perspective of Career Exploration Across the Life RolesThe Career Development Quarterly, 1997
- Tracing Super's Theory of Vocational Development: a 40-Year RetrospectiveJournal of Career Development, 1996
- Work in people's lives: A location for counseling psychologists.Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1993
- Vocational behavior, 1989–1991: Life-span career development and reciprocal interaction of work and nonworkJournal of Vocational Behavior, 1992
- Career development in adulthood: Some theoretical problems and a possible solutionBritish Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 1981
- A theory of vocational development.American Psychologist, 1953
- Psychology: A study of mental activity.Published by American Psychological Association (APA) ,1925
- The Relations of Structural and Functional Psychology to PhilosophyThe Philosophical Review, 1903
- The reflex arc concept in psychology.Psychological Review, 1896