Students’ perceptions of career counselling: an examination of a graduate curriculum in the United States

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Students’ perceptions of career counselling: an examination of a graduate curriculum in the United States
Abstract
Despite its importance as a core counselling competency, less attention is given to career counselling than to other counselling specialties and it is often dismissed as a non-essential category in the counselling field. Because students’ perceptions of career counselling are affected by peer and faculty attitudes it is important to examine the training needs and experiences of graduate counselling students. Therefore, in the current study we utilised a phenomenological approach to examine students’ perceptions of a career counselling curriculum, and its impact on overall views of career counselling. Analysis of in-depth interviews yielded five major themes: View of Career Counselling, Course Delivery, Theory, Application of Knowledge, and Connection between Career Counselling and Personal Counselling. © 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
Publication
British Journal of Guidance & Counselling
Date
2020
Volume
48
Issue
6
Pages
803–814
Journal Abbr
Br. J. Guid. Couns.
Citation Key
lindoStudentsPerceptionsCareer2020
ISSN
03069885 (ISSN)
Language
English
Extra
1 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31] tex.ids: lens.org/071-399-916-740-600, lindoStudentsPerceptionsCareer2020 tex.citation: https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopusid/85074340531 tex.type: [object Object] type: Article
Citation
Lindo, N. A., Ceballos, P. L., Blalock, S., Conner, C., Edwards, J., Spellings, M., Webster, L., & Opiola, K. (2020). Students’ perceptions of career counselling: an examination of a graduate curriculum in the United States. British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 48(6), 803–814. https://doi.org/10.1080/03069885.2019.1679350