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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

NYCKELN TILL ARBETSMARKNADEN : En kvalitativ studie om privata aktörers arbete med matchningsprocessen för lågutbildade individer

Ghaderi, Emilia, Sjöstedt, Sandra January 2019 (has links)
Syftet med uppsatsen är att undersöka hur privata aktörer arbetar med stöd och matchning av arbetssökande individer som saknar gymnasieexamen. Uppsatsen avser att besvara två frågeställningar: -Hur beskriver de privata aktörerna sitt arbete med lågutbildade individer? -Vilka insatser finns för lågutbildade individer i matchningsarbetet? Uppsatsen behandlar matchningsprocessen för arbetssökande. Främst belyses privata aktörers arbete med matchningsprocessen för lågutbildade individer samt vilka insatser som står till förfogande för målgruppen. Insamlad empiri består av fem kvalitativa intervjuer genomförda i en mindre och en större stad. Informanterna valdes strategiskt utifrån uppsatsens undersökta område. Intervjuguiden är formulerad i ett semistrukturerat format och baseras på teman som ansågs relevanta för att besvara frågeställningarna. Resultatet visade att det råder utmaningar med att matcha lågutbildade individer till sysselsättning samt att matchningsprocessen var densamma oberoende av utbildningsnivå. Signifikant för aktörerna var att de var beroende av arbetsmarknadspolitiska åtgärder och påverkades till stor del av Arbetsförmedlingens omorganisation.
2

An investigation into my career chapter : a dialogical autobiography

McIlveen, Peter F. January 2008 (has links)
This dissertation is a report on research into the development and evaluation of a career assessment and counselling procedure that falls under the aegis of the constructivist, narrative approach: My Career Chapter: A Dialogical Autobiography. My Career Chapter enables an individual to construct a holistic understanding of his or her career. The procedure facilitates an individual writing and reflecting on an autobiographical account of his or her career that is contextualised amidst systems of career influences. The resulting autobiographical text can be used in career counselling, including co-constructive dialogue between client and counsellor. The literature underpinning the research project is described with a wide-ranging discussion of issues that critically pertain to the research endeavour and essentially provide a primary base for the work. Two theoretical frameworks that exemplify constructivism in vocational psychology underpin the research: the Systems Theory Framework and the Theory of Career Construction. From the base of those two theoretical frameworks, narrative career counselling is explicated and exemplars are described. The Theory of Dialogical Self is introduced to inform the design of My Career Chapter and, ultimately, the theory and practice of narrative career counselling. The research is predominantly positioned within a paradigm of constructivism/interpretivism and the results of the studies are collectively interpreted accordingly; but postpositivism and critical ideological paradigms are present in a secondary form due to the mixture of research methods used in the project as a whole. Six empirical studies investigate the experience of My Career Chapter from the perspective of the developer, the counsellor-user, and the client-user; each explicated with two studies respectively. Research methods include autoethnography for the developer's experience, interpretative phenomenological analysis and focus group for the counsellor-users' experience, and quasi-experiment and interpretative phenomenological analysis for the client-users' experience. The studies of the developer's experience of My Career Chapter comprehensively explicate how and why the procedure was developed and emphasise the importance of reflexive science and practice. Crucially, the autoethnographies revealed a nexus of theory-practice-person which underpins the production of My Career Chapter, and critically influences the entire research project. The studies involving counsellor-users affirmed My Career Chapter's alignment with recommendations for the development and application of qualitative career assessment and counselling procedures. These studies also raised questions pertaining to the characteristics of client-users that may mediate the efficacy of the procedure (e.g., age, language ability). Studies of client-users firstly support the conclusion that My Career Chapter is a safe career assessment and counselling procedure, with minimal attendant risk of inducing psychological harm or distress. The procedure was experienced as being helpful as a tool for personal reflection, through its theoretically-derived processes of facilitating clients writing, reading, and hearing and talking their autobiographical manuscripts through in the interpretation phase. There are four dimensions of significance associated with this research project. Firstly, the divide between theory and practice has indeed been much lamented in vocational psychology and counselling psychology. Thus, the overall significance of the research reported upon in this dissertation is significant because it attempts to bring theory and practice together through a reflexive and theoretically informed research process into a career assessment and counselling procedure. Secondly, the research and development process produced a new career assessment and counselling product which will add to the limited range of techniques that fall under the aegis of constructivist career assessment and counselling broadly, and the narrative approach specifically. My Career Chapter complements other procedures. Thirdly, two of the research methods used in the project (viz., autoethnography and interpretative phenomenological analysis) demonstrated their potential as additional qualitative methods for research within vocational psychology. Finally, the research process has enabled the articulation of the Theory of Dialogical Self—from another branch of psychology—into the extant corpus of literature on career development theory and practice.
3

How Do Educational Leaders Understand Career Readiness: A Q-methodological Study

Lopienski, Sarah A. 15 July 2016 (has links)
No description available.

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