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Journal ArticleDOI

Contextual supports and barriers to career choice: A social cognitive analysis.

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TLDR
A recent review of the career barriers literature presents a mixed picture as discussed by the authors, on the one hand, students and workers do perceive barriers to their career progress; but on the other hand, barrier ratings are often found to be besomewhat modest in size and have not been shown to be consistently related to important career outcome or process variables in the mostly student samples in which they have been studied.
Abstract
Summary The foregoing review of the career barriers literaturepresents a mixed picture. On the one hand, students andworkers do perceive barriers to their career progress; but onthe other hand, barrier ratings are often found to besomewhat modest in size and have not been shown to beconsistently related to important career outcome or processvariables in the mostly student samples in which they havebeen studied. This is not to say that barriers are notconsequential for many Individuals. Indeed, they are likelyto be especially salient for those who have been victimizedby various forms of oppression. However, several concep-tual and methodological issues—such as the manner inwhich barriers have been defined, failure to consider thecontext and temporal specificity of barriers, noncorrespon-dence between barriers and outcome criteria (in terms ofcontent and developmental task), infrequent attention tomediating and moderating variables, understudy of nonstu-dent samples, and use of designs that do not explorepotential causal effects of barriers—may have partly ob-scured the impact of perceived barriers and the mechanismsthrough which they affect career behavior.Despite these considerations, recent career barriers re-search has constructed an important conceptual and method-ological foundation for further inquiry, and the program-matic research of Swanson, McWhirter, and Luzzo and theircolleagues has been particularly pivotal. In the remainder ofthis article, we attempt to build on this foundation, offering amodest set of suggestions for future research on careerbarriers and their conceptual partner, career supports. Thesesuggestions are premised on the need to clarify or elaboratecertain aspects of SCCT having relevance for the conceptu-alization and assessment of contextual variables.

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Parent Academic Involvement as Related to School Behavior, Achievement, and Aspirations: Demographic Variations Across Adolescence

TL;DR: There were variations across parental education levels and ethnicity: Among the higher parental education group, parent academic involvement was related to fewer behavioral problems, which were related to achievement and then aspirations, and among the lower parental education groups, parent Academic involvement wasrelated to aspirations but not to behavior or achievement.
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Pipeline persistence: Examining the association of educational experiences with earned degrees in STEM among U.S. students

TL;DR: This article conducted a two-part analysis to assess the school-based factors related to students choosing to complete a major in STEM and found that the majority of students who concentrate in STEM make that choice during high school and that choice is related to a growing interest in mathematics and science rather than enrollment or achievement.
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Social cognitive model of career self-management: Toward a unifying view of adaptive career behavior across the life span.

TL;DR: This work presents a social cognitive model of career self-management and offers examples of the adaptive, process behaviors to which it can be applied (e.g., career decision making/exploration, job searching, career advancement, negotiation of work transitions and multiple roles).
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Why Students Choose STEM Majors Motivation, High School Learning, and Postsecondary Context of Support

TL;DR: In this article, a conceptual framework for understanding the entrance into science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) majors by recent high school graduates attending 4-year institutions was proposed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relation of Contextual Supports and Barriers to Choice Behavior in Engineering Majors: Test of Alternative Social Cognitive Models.

TL;DR: In this article, Lent et al. found good support for a model portraying contextual supports and barriers as linked to choice goals and actions (i.e., persistence in engineering) indirectly, through self-efficacy, rather than directly, as posited by social cognitive career theory.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a Unifying Social Cognitive Theory of Career and Academic Interest, Choice, and Performance

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