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Vocational Skills and Outcomes Among Native American Adolescents: A Test of the Integrative Contextual Model of Career Development

✍ Scribed by Sherri L. Turner; Michelle J. Trotter; Richard T. Lapan; Katherine A. Czajka; Pahoua Yang; Annette E. A. Brissett


Publisher
American Counseling Association
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Weight
73 KB
Volume
54
Category
Article
ISSN
0889-4019

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✦ Synopsis


This study tested hypotheses of the Integrative Contextual Model of Career Development (R. T. Lapan, 2004a) by investigating the multivariate effects of 6 interrelated career development skills (career exploration, person‐ environment fit, goal setting, social/prosocial/work readiness, self‐regulated learning, and the utilization of social support) on 6 intermediate vocational outcomes (academic achievement, self‐efficacy expectations, positive self‐attributions, vocational interests, vocational identity, and proactivity) among Native American adolescents. Results showed that individual and shared variance among the skills positively predicted 79% of variance in 5 of the 6 outcomes. Results suggest that each of the skills contributes substantially and in combination to Native American adolescents' career development.