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Holland's secondary constructs of vocational interests and career choice readiness of secondary students: Measures for related but different constructs

journal contribution
posted on 2022-10-24, 04:56 authored by Andreas Hirschi, D Läge
Abstract. This study examined the relationship between the secondary constructs of Holland's (1997) theory of vocational interests and career choice readiness (career maturity) attitudes with 358 Swiss secondary students. The hypothesis was tested that the secondary constructs consistency, coherence, differentiation, and congruence are measures for the degree of vocational interest development. Thus, they should belong to the content domain in career choice readiness and should show meaningful relations to career-choice readiness attitudes. The hypothesis was confirmed for congruence, coherence, and differentiation. Interest-profile consistency showed no relation to career-choice readiness attitudes. Vocational identity emerged as a direct measure for career-choice readiness attitudes. Realism of career aspirations was related to career-choice readiness attitudes and coherence of career aspirations. Profile elevation was positively connected to more career planning and career exploration. Differences between gender, ethnicity, and school-types are presented. Implications for career counseling and assessment practice are discussed.

History

Journal

Journal of Individual Differences

Volume

28

Pagination

205-218

ISSN

1614-0001

eISSN

2151-2299

Language

en

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

4

Publisher

Hogrefe Publishing Group

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