Why it’s Needed

Helping students become career-focused and career-committed.
Central to the message of the Career Choices curriculum is helping students become
career-focused and
career-committed while learning how to make effective decisions
about their futures. Studies show that students who enter college or post-secondary
training career-focused and career-committed are far more likely to graduate and
transition into productive work that matches their education and training.
Building on the momentum started by the Career Choices experience.
In order to accomplish this, and to maintain the momentum started by a course involving
Career Choices,
it is critical that students revisit and revise their 10-year plans
during their sophomore, junior, and senior years. The more students are asked to
rethink and rework their plans, the more meaningful the plans become and the more
comfortable students will be making decisions that involve change -- which is a crucial
survival skill in the workforce of the 21st century.
Providing data-driven information about each student's plan that can
be accessed quickly and easily.
For advisory situations to function effectively, instructors, counselors, and advisors need
quantitative information about each student and their unique education and career
goals. The best guidance is provided when working from specific examples, rather than
general or vague notions. If advice and mentoring is built on each student's identifiable
goals, it will have more meaning. By having this information online, all stake holders can
quickly access this in-depth information so individual guidance can be provided easily.
For high school students it is learning "the process," rather than
focusing on the end result, that counts.
Becoming career-focused and career-committed doesn't mean that students are making
final, lifelong career choices. Instead, they are learning an important decision-making
process by pondering and answering the questions who am I, what do I want, and how do
I get it. This is an explicit process they will use throughout their lives when faced with
major decisions. Knowing this process in a step-by-step sequence exposes young people
to sophisticated techniques and strategies not normally experienced at such a young age.
The online 10-year plan, which allows for ongoing exposure to the process and
updating of the plan, reinforces what they've learned so it becomes innate.
The plan must be meaningful if it is going to impact students' efforts.
To be meaningful, it must be updated as students discover important
aspects of themselves and the world around them.
As articulated in
Principal Leadership magazine, for a
standards-based comprehensive guidance course like Career Choices to be effective,
students' 10-year plans must be readily available to all instructors so each academic
department can provide opportunities for students to rework their plans. Examples of this
include:
- A 10th-grade social studies department could work with its students to reassess their
10-year plans once they study globalization and its impact on the American
workforce.
- An 11th-grade English department can facilitate the annual re-editing of the plans
once the students read a literary work in which a character struggles with his or her
own life-planning issues.
- As part of a senior independent study project, students could update their 10-year
plans to use in college or employment interviews. Or, students could choose a
service learning project in a career interest area, as identified in the current version
of their plan.
The realities of the 21st-century workforce are unlike any we've
experienced before.
In the 21st century, when the vast majority of jobs no longer enjoy long-term stability
(due to changing industries, globalization, and technological advancements), knowing how
to navigate the ever-changing world of work has become a critical life skill. Those that fail
to adapt to this new reality could be condemned to subsistence living.
My10yearPlan.com is the forum in which these important issues can be addressed.