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Children's Career Expectations and Parents' Jobs: Intergenerational (Dis)continuities

Authors
Oliveira, Iris M.Porfeli, Erik J.Taveira, Maria do CeuLee, Bora
Issue Date
3월-2020
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
childhood career development; career expectations; family; parents; intergenerational occupational transmission
Citation
CAREER DEVELOPMENT QUARTERLY, v.68, no.1, pp.63 - 77
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
CAREER DEVELOPMENT QUARTERLY
Volume
68
Number
1
Start Page
63
End Page
77
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/57493
DOI
10.1002/cdq.12213
ISSN
0889-4019
Abstract
Children develop career expectations as they increase self-knowledge and perceive societal affordances and barriers to life roles. Parents are powerful agents in the socialization of children to work, transmitting occupational concepts that influence children's career development. The authors used Gottfredson's (1981) and Holland's (1973) theories to test associations between children's career expectations and parents' jobs in terms of gender, prestige, and interest typology among same-sex and cross-sex child-parent dyads. Data were collected from 185 Portuguese children (51.4% boys, 48.6% girls; M-age = 10.41 years) from 2-parent families. Children reported their parents' jobs and shared personal career expectations. Correlation and linear regression results indicated that fathers' male-dominated jobs put boys at risk of gender-based circumscription of career expectations. An intergenerational cycle of prestige inequalities was also evidenced, although parents seemed to support children's exploration of various interest areas. Future research could explore these relationships across family structures. Practice should foster children's in-breadth career exploration and engage parents as key partners.
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