Robertson 2013
Robertson 2013
To cite this article: Peter J. Robertson (2013) The well-being outcomes of career guidance, British
Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 41:3, 254-266, DOI: 10.1080/03069885.2013.773959
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                                                                  British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2013
                                                                  Vol. 41, No. 3, 254266, http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03069885.2013.773959
                                                                  School of Life, Sport and Social Sciences, Edinburgh Napier University, Edinburgh, UK
                                                                  (Received 24 August 2012; final version received 3 February 2013)
                                                                         The potential for career guidance to impact on well-being has received insufficient
                                                                         attention in the UK. There are both conceptual and empirical reasons to expect
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                                                                         that the impacts may be positive, but a lack of evidence directly testing this
                                                                         proposition. Career guidance has commonalities with therapeutic counselling
                                                                         suggesting analogous effects, and it promotes positive engagement in work and
                                                                         learning, which may be associated with health benefits. There are implications for
                                                                         services in reconciling health and employment objectives. However, the promo-
                                                                         tion of well-being need not imply quasi-clinical ways of working. A call is made
                                                                         for more research and debate in the career guidance community as to the extent
                                                                         and implications of the potentially important relationship between career
                                                                         guidance and well-being.
                                                                         Keywords: career guidance; career counselling; positive psychology; emotions
                                                                  Introduction
                                                                  Since the turn of the millennium there has been increasing interest in happiness and
                                                                  well-being. This is particularly evident in the work of positive psychologists (e.g.
                                                                  Diener & Seligman, 2004) and the economists and policy makers they have
                                                                  influenced (e.g. Halpern, 2010; Layard, 2005). In the UK, the health and well-being
                                                                  of the working age population has become a focus of concern for employment policy
                                                                  (e.g. Black, 2008) and in education there has been:
                                                                  In spite of these developments, the concept of well-being has been neglected by the
                                                                  UK guidance community, with rare exceptions, notably Kidd (2006, 2008) who
                                                                  focuses primarily on careers in organisations. There has been little attempt to
                                                                  systematically explore its implications. This article attempts to provide a foundation
                                                                  for such an exploration, and seeks to establish the topic as interesting, important and
                                                                  relevant to both career guidance practitioners and researchers.
                                                                      A brief introduction to the concept of well-being is used to set the scene. This is
                                                                  followed by a discussion of the two main channels by which career guidance might
                                                                  lead to improvements in well-being. These are direct effects, comparable to those
                                                                  found in therapeutic counselling, and indirect effects via promotion of healthy
*Email: p.robertson@napier.ac.uk
                                                                  Direct effects
                                                                  This section explores the mechanisms by which the experience of participating in
                                                                  career guidance may have direct effects on the well-being of service users. To the
                                                                  256 P.J. Robertson
                                                                  well-being (Borgen & Betz, 2008; Borgen & Lindley, 2003; Schwarzer, 2008). Recent
                                                                  evidence suggests that belief in one’s own employability can substantially limit the
                                                                  negative psychological effects of unemployment (Green, 2011). Recipients of career
                                                                  guidance often report their confidence has been boosted (e.g. Bimrose, Barnes, &
                                                                  Hughes, 2008; Joyce, Smith, Sullivan, & Bambra, 2010). Hughes and Gration (2009a)
                                                                  review the literature and conclude there is strong evidence that in-depth career
                                                                  guidance promotes confidence in job seeking. So competence beliefs are important
                                                                  determinants of well-being, and they are likely to be boosted by career-related
                                                                  interventions.
                                                                      Career guidance may also encourage clients to be optimistic, set constructive
                                                                  external goals and focus on the future rather than ruminate on past or present
                                                                  problems. A bias towards future life planning is fundamental to career guidance. The
                                                                  counselling models typically adopted in career guidance settings in the UK are often
                                                                  goal and action oriented (e.g. Egan, 2010). Aside from any practical benefits
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                                                                  resulting from goal achievement, the process of setting and pursuing goals is likely to
                                                                  be of intrinsic benefit. Optimism is a key characteristic of the mentally healthy, and
                                                                  the adoption of goals implies a willingness to entertain the possibility of positive
                                                                  outcomes. A more thorough rationale for this claim is provided by Lent and Brown
                                                                  (2008). Seeking to integrate positive and vocational psychology, they provide a
                                                                  social-cognitive model that identifies goals as a key factor influencing both job
                                                                  satisfaction (well-being in the work domain) and life satisfaction (global well-being).
                                                                      Although largely future focused, where career guidance is retrospective, it seeks
                                                                  to encourage a positive reconstruction of the meaning of past experience. People
                                                                  often hold distorted interpretations of setbacks as failures (Cannon, 1997). With
                                                                  support, career and personal biography can be viewed as resource bank of skills,
                                                                  qualifications and experience; as assets to deploy to meet future challenges. Past
                                                                  events, even those with negative outcomes, can be redefined and become a source of
                                                                  learning. This process of reframing is a feature of many helping perspectives, but is
                                                                  particularly salient in narrative counselling, an approach that has been influential in
                                                                  recent thinking in career guidance (e.g. Reid, 2006). Hartung and Taber (2008) takes
                                                                  this rationale a stage further by claiming that a constructivist approach to career
                                                                  counselling promotes subjective well-being through supporting adjustment to
                                                                  developmental challenges and the implementation of a healthy social identity.
                                                                      The construction of social identity is a core activity of careers work, because
                                                                  work and learning activities define vocational identity, an important component of
                                                                  social identity. Career guidance may encourage clients to redefine their vocational
                                                                  identity in a way that strengthens their self-esteem. There is good evidence that
                                                                  interventions can impact on vocational identity (Whiston & Rahardja, 2008), and
                                                                  this construct seems to have a strong inverse relationship to career anxiety (Holland,
                                                                  Daiger, & Power, 1980). It seems that a well-formed vocational identity may help to
                                                                  protect against distress. Career guidance may also move clients towards a wider
                                                                  social identity that avoids clashing with their value system. Osipow and Fitzgerald
                                                                  (1996) suggest career choice could be seen as a process of cognitive dissonance
                                                                  reduction.
                                                                  Indirect effects
                                                                  There is a vast literature linking unemployment with detriments to mental health,
                                                                  including some authoritative reviews (e.g. McKee-Ryan, Song, Wanbeg, & Kinicki,
                                                                  258 P.J. Robertson
                                                                  2005; Paul & Moser, 2009). Even allowing for the possibility that poor health may
                                                                  increase the chances of unemployment, the weight of evidence makes it unambigu-
                                                                  ously clear that unemployment is a causal factor in poor mental health. Conversely,
                                                                  work tends on balance to promote mental health (Waddell & Burton, 2006), but only
                                                                  if it is good quality work. Unhealthy psycho-social environments and insecure or
                                                                  marginal work may offer negligible benefits or be harmful to health. This implies that
                                                                  to the extent that career guidance promotes good quality work, it seems likely it will
                                                                  tend to promote well-being.
                                                                       There is an equivalent, but much smaller literature relating to participation in
                                                                  learning. This explores well-being outcomes alongside social outcomes, as one of a
                                                                  number of possible wider benefits resulting from engagement in learning. In general,
                                                                  health and well-being improve with more years spent in education (Centre for
                                                                  Research into the Wider Benefits of Learning, 2006; Hammond, 2004; Ross &
                                                                  Mirowsky, 1999), a relationship that reflects patterns of social inequality (Wilkinson
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                                                                  & Pickett, 2010). It must be acknowledged that education may have some disbenefits,
                                                                  and the evidence in relation to some sectors is weak (further education), equivocal
                                                                  (higher education) or suggestive of only transient benefits (vocational training).
                                                                  However, Field (2009a, b) reviews the literature and suggests that on balance it
                                                                  indicates a positive effect of learning on well-being, particularly for the most
                                                                  disadvantaged groups in adult and community education. Similarly, studies of
                                                                  volunteering also point to positive health effects of participation (Casiday, Kinsman,
                                                                  Fisher, & Bambra, 2008; Corporation for National and Community Service, 2007),
                                                                  although the evidence base is somewhat weighted towards older or retired volunteers.
                                                                       Work and learning often involve absorbing activities that give opportunities for
                                                                  use of skills, and a sense of control. Benefits may be enhanced to the extent that the
                                                                  activities are personally meaningful and well matched to individual interests, values
                                                                  and abilities. Csikszentmihalyi (2002) uses the concept of ‘flow’ to describe the
                                                                  healthy state of absorption in activity. Task engagement may also help to block
                                                                  negative thinking. Silva (2006) makes a persuasive case that interest is a transient
                                                                  emotional state associated with positive well-being, which over time can become a
                                                                  personality characteristic. This is a foundation for enduring eudaimonic well-being.
                                                                  Having vocational interests that are congruent with the work environment is
                                                                  associated with higher job satisfaction, although the relationship is not as strong
                                                                  as might be expected (Arnold, 2004; Furnham, 2001). Job satisfaction is related to
                                                                  health (Faragher, Cass, & Cooper, 2005) and to global life satisfaction (Erdogan,
                                                                  Bauer, Truxillo, & Mansfield, 2012). There is also some evidence that happiness may
                                                                  be a cause of career success rather than vice versa (Boehm & Lyubomirsky, 2008;
                                                                  Lyubomirsky, King, & Diener, 2005).
                                                                       In addition to tasks and activities, there may be social benefits too. As career
                                                                  guidance aims to promote participation in work and learning, this means that clients
                                                                  may gain opportunities to belong to a social group, to forge friendships and avoid
                                                                  loneliness. This may enable them to build both the quality and quantity of their
                                                                  social ties, to make useful contacts that may support them in facing future career or
                                                                  personal challenges. This should promote mental well-being. A systematic review
                                                                  from De Silva, McKenzie, Harpham and Huttly (2005) concluded that there appears
                                                                  to be a negative association between an individual’s social capital and their level of
                                                                  mental health symptoms.
                                                                       The extrinsic benefits of participation must also be considered. Lack of money
                                                                  can have a corrosive effect on well-being. Financial pressures and debts lead to
                                                                                                        British Journal of Guidance & Counselling      259
                                                                  then gains in relation to health are secondary  a desirable side effect, or perhaps a
                                                                  necessary problem to manage or overcome on the road to a job. A therapeutically
                                                                  oriented service might adopt the reverse rationale: work could be seen as desirable
                                                                  side effect of getting better, or as a step in the recovery process. Multiple objectives
                                                                  need to be reconciled.
                                                                      Multiple objectives may also need to be sequenced, particularly where health
                                                                  needs are substantive. A distinction has been drawn between ‘work first’ and ‘human
                                                                  capital development’ initiatives to support unemployed adult job seekers from
                                                                  welfare into work. The former promote early placement into open employment; the
                                                                  latter focus on skills acquisition prior to job seeking. Work first approaches have
                                                                  tended to dominate (Lindsay, Mcquaid, & Dutton, 2007). Bambra (2011) suggests an
                                                                  alternative for those who are workless for reasons of sickness: a ‘health first’
                                                                  approach, where health conditions among benefit claimants need to be managed
                                                                  before re-entering work. Thus services face choices as to what comes first: work,
                                                                  learning, health, or pursuing these goals in parallel. Brown (1985) seems to be the
                                                                  only career counselling source raising the issue of sequencing health and vocational
                                                                  support. With the proviso that careful assessment is needed, he advocates that where
                                                                  the relationship with work is a key source of distress, then early career counselling is
                                                                  appropriate even where emotional problems are severe.
                                                                      Historically, career guidance services have been located in employment- or
                                                                  education-focused settings. Another perspective is introduced by considering health
                                                                  services as a potential location for career guidance; indeed some vocational
                                                                  rehabilitation services are located in clinical settings by choice (e.g. Bond et al.,
                                                                  2001; Sainsbury et al., 2008). If a work-focused service can have a health setting, then
                                                                  logically a health-promoting service can have an employment or educational setting.
                                                                  It does not follow that services require a quasi-clinical culture in order to deliver
                                                                  health benefits; on the contrary, the mainstream feel of the environment may be a
                                                                  beneficial ingredient (e.g. Perkins, Repper, Rinaldi, & Brown, 2012).
                                                                      The career counselling literature points to the commonalities between career and
                                                                  therapeutic counselling, often advocating a fluid boundary between these activities
                                                                  (e.g. Richardson, 1996; Westergaard, 2012). In the UK attempts to define career
                                                                  guidance as a counselling activity have met with some resistance from policy makers
                                                                  (Jayasinghe, 2001); career guidance and therapy remain distinct. This need not be an
                                                                  obstacle; adopting individual psychotherapy as a model for practice is not the only
                                                                  way to promote well-being. Counselling is only one of the activities of career
                                                                                                        British Journal of Guidance & Counselling      261
                                                                  Conclusions
                                                                  It is possible to propose a number of plausible causal mechanisms through which
                                                                  career guidance interventions might have a direct impact on well-being comparable
                                                                  to therapeutic counselling, or an indirect impact, via promoting participation in
                                                                  healthy work and learning. Although there is a lack of unambiguous evidence
                                                                  demonstrating well-being outcomes of career guidance, there is a sound rationale,
                                                                  and enough evidence to suggest that it is reasonable to expect these impacts might be
                                                                  positive. There remains a pressing need for research to directly evaluate the well-
                                                                  being outcomes of career guidance with a view to informing our understanding of the
                                                                  ways in which practice can contribute to the promotion of health and well-being.
                                                                      This article has made explicit a number of fundamental considerations facing a
                                                                  ‘health aware’ career guidance service. In the case of a service working with those
                                                                  with substantive health conditions, there are issues to address in terms of how to
                                                                  reconcile and combine dual health and employment objectives. However, it is not just
                                                                  specialist rehabilitation services that could adopt health objectives. The promotion of
                                                                  positive well-being in the clients of career guidance services need not require a quasi-
                                                                  clinical approach. It may be relevant to the needs of mainstream service users in
                                                                  educational and occupational settings.
                                                                  262 P.J. Robertson
                                                                      Although the evidence base is at an early stage of development, it is clear that the
                                                                  career guidance community needs to consider the potential well-being effects of its
                                                                  services. It is time to call for practitioners and researchers to discuss the appropriate
                                                                  extent and nature of the profession’s involvement in the promotion of health and
                                                                  well-being.
                                                                  Notes on contributor
                                                                  Peter Robertson trained as a career adviser at Bristol Polytechnic, before working in
                                                                  Hertfordshire and North London, specialising in supporting young people with disabilities.
                                                                  He became a training manager after studying occupational psychology at the University of
                                                                  East London. A chartered psychologist, he currently leads the career guidance programmes at
                                                                  Edinburgh Napier University.
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