Career Development Flashcards

1
Q

Lifestyle and career development have been emphasized

a. only since the late 1950s.
b. only since the late 1960s.
c. only since nondirective counseling became popular.
d. since the beginning of the counseling and guidance movement
and are still major areas of concern.

A

d. since the beginning of the counseling and guidance movement
and are still major areas of concern.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

One trend is that women are moving into more careers that in
the past were populated by males. Women workers are often
impacted by the “glass ceiling phenomenon.” Assuming that a
counselor’s behavior is influenced by the phenomenon, which
statement would he most likely make when conducting a career
counseling session with a female client who wants to advance to
a higher position?

a. “Your ability to advance in the corporate world is generally
based on your mother’s attitude toward work. Can
you tell me a little about that?”
b. “Actually, women can advance quite rapidly in the corporate
world. I support you 100%. I’d say you should be
optimistic and go for the position.”
c. “Let’s be rational: A woman can only advance so far. You
really have very little if any chance of becoming a corporate
executive. I’m here to help you cope with this reality.”
d. “In most cases a female will work in a position that is at
the same level as her father. Did your dad ever work as a
corporate executive?

A

c. “Let’s be rational: A woman can only advance so far. You
really have very little if any chance of becoming a corporate
executive. I’m here to help you cope with this reality.”

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

Most research in the area of career development and its relationship
to students indicates that

a. a very high proportion of students in high school and at
the junior high or middle-school level wanted guidance in
planning a career. Career interests are more stable after
college.
b. students did not want career guidance despite its importance.
c. many students were too inflexible to benefit from career
guidance.
d. high school students wanted career guidance but junior
high school or middle-school-level students did not.

A

a. a very high proportion of students in high school and at
the junior high or middle-school level wanted guidance in
planning a career. Career interests are more stable after
college.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

A dual-career family (or dual-worker couple) is one in which
both partners have jobs to which they are committed on a somewhat
continuous basis. Which statement is true of dual-career
families?

a. Surprisingly enough, dual-career families have lower incomes
than families in which only one partner works.
b. Dual-career families have higher incomes than the socalled
traditional family in which only one partner is
working.
c. Dual-career families have incomes which are almost identical
to families with one partner working.
d. Surprisingly enough, no research has been conducted on
dual-career families.

A

b. Dual-career families have higher incomes than the so-called
traditional family in which only one partner is
working.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

In the dual-career family, partners seem to be more self-sufficient than in the traditional family. In a dual-career household,
the woman

a. generally has children before entering the work force.
b. rarely if ever has children.
c. is not self-reliant.
d. is typically secure in her career before she has children.

A

d. is typically secure in her career before she has children.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

Studies indicate that

a. students receive ample vocational guidance.
b. most parents can provide appropriate vocational guidance.
c. students want more vocational guidance than they receive.
d. career days meet the vocational guidance needs of most
students.

A

c. students want more vocational guidance than they receive.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

Statistics reveal that

a. on average, a worker with a bachelor’s degree earns over
$10,000 a year more than a worker with a high school diploma.
b. fewer workers possess a high-school degree than ever before.
c. blue-collar jobs are growing faster than white-collar jobs.
d. older workers are slower than younger workers and have
less skill.

A

a. on average, a worker with a bachelor’s degree earns over

$10,000 a year more than a worker with a high school diploma.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

When professional career counselors use the term leisure they
technically mean

a. the client is having fun at work or away from work.
b. the client is relaxing at work or away from work.
c. the client is working at less than 100% capacity at work or
away from work.
d. the time the client has away from work which is not being
utilized for obligations.

A

d. the time the client has away from work which is not being

utilized for obligations.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

In terms of leisure time and dual-career families

a. dual-career families have more leisure time.
b. dual-career families have the same amount of leisure time
as families with one wage earner.
c. dual-career families have less leisure time.
d. dual-career families have more weekend leisure time.

A

c. dual-career families have less leisure time.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

A client who says, “I feel I cannot really become an administrator
in our agency because I am a woman,” is showing an example
of

a. gender bias.
b. counselor bias.
c. the trait-and-factor theory.
d. developmental theory and career choice.

A

a. gender bias.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

One major category of career theory is known as the trait-factor
(also called the trait-and-factor) approach. It has also been
dubbed the actuarial or matching approach. This approach

a. attempts to match conscious and unconscious work motives.
b. attempts to match the worker and the work environment
(job factors). The approach thus makes the assumption
that there is one best or single career for the person.
c. attempts to match career behavior with attitudes.
d. attempts to match cognition with the workload.

A

b. attempts to match the worker and the work environment
(job factors). The approach thus makes the assumption
that there is one best or single career for the person.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

The trait-and-factor career counseling, actuarial, or matching
approach (which matches clients with a job) is associated with

a. Parsons and Williamson.
b. Roe and Brill.
c. Holland and Super.
d. Tiedeman and O’Hara.

A

a. Parsons and Williamson.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

The trait-and-factor or actuarial approach asserts that

a. job selection is a long-term development process.
b. testing is an important part of the counseling process.
c. a counselor can match the correct person with the appropriate
job.
d. b and c.

A

d. b and c.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

In 1909 a landmark book entitled Choosing a Vocation was released.
The book was written by Frank Parsons. Parsons has
been called

a. the Father of lifestyle.
b. the Father of modern counseling.
c. the Father of vocational guidance.
d. the fourth force in counseling.

A

c. the Father of vocational guidance.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

Which statement is not true of the trait-and-factor approach to career counseling?

a. The approach attempts to match the person’s traits with
the requirements of a job.
b. The approach usually relies on psychometric information.
c. The approach is developmental and thus focuses on career
maturity.
d. The approach is associated with the work of Parsons and
Williamson.

A

c. The approach is developmental and thus focuses on career

maturity.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

Edmund Griffi th Williamson’s work (or the so-called Minnesota
Viewpoint) purports to be scientific and didactic, utilizing test data from instruments such as the

a. Rorschach and the TAT.
b. Binet and the Wechsler.
c. BDI and the MMPI.
d. Minnesota Occupational Rating Scales.

A

d. Minnesota Occupational Rating Scales.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
17
Q

The trait-and-factor approach fails to take _______ into account.

a. individual change throughout the life span.
b. relevant psychometric data.
c. personality.
d. job requirements.

A

a. individual change throughout the life span.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
18
Q

Anne Roe suggested a personality approach to career choice

a. based on cognitive-behavioral therapy.
b. based on a model of strict operant conditioning.
c. based on the premise that a job satisfies an unconscious
need.
d. based on the work of Pavlov.

A

c. based on the premise that a job satisfies an unconscious

need.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
19
Q

Roe was the first career specialist to utilize a two-dimensional
system of occupational classification utilizing

a. unconscious and preconscious.
b. fields and levels.
c. yin and yang.
d. transactional analysis nomenclature.

A

b. fields and levels.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
20
Q

All of the following are examples of Anne Roe’s “fields” except

a. service.
b. science.
c. arts and entertainment.
d. unskilled.

A

d. unskilled.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
21
Q

All of the following are examples of Anne Roe’s “levels” except

a. outdoor.
b. semiskilled.
c. semiprofessional/small business.
d. professional and managerial.

A

a. outdoor.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
22
Q

Roe spoke of three basic parenting styles: overprotective, avoidant,
or acceptant. The result is that the child

a. experiences neurosis or psychosis.
b. will eventually have a lot of jobs or a lack of employment.
c. will develop a personality which gravitates (i.e., moves)
toward people or away from people.
d. will suffer from depression in the work setting or will be
highly motivated to succeed.

A

c. will develop a personality which gravitates (i.e., moves)

toward people or away from people.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
23
Q

Roe’s theory relies on Abraham Maslow’s hierarchy of needs in
the sense that in terms of career choice

a. lower order needs take precedence over higher order
needs.
b. self-actualization needs take precedence over lower order
needs.
c. all needs are given equal consideration.
d. the need for self-actualization would overpower a physical
need.

A

a. lower order needs take precedence over higher order

needs.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
24
Q

Some support for Roe’s theory comes from

a. the BDI.
b. the WAIS-R.
c. the Rorschach and the TAT.
d. the gestalt therapy movement.

A

c. the Rorschach and the TAT.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
25
Q

In terms of genetics, Roe’s theory would assert that

a. genetics play a very minor role in career choice.
b. genetics help to determine intelligence and education,
and hence this infl uences one’s career choice.
c. genetics are important while upbringing is not.
d. genetics are important while the unconscious is not.

A

b. genetics help to determine intelligence and education,

and hence this influences one’s career choice.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
26
Q

According to Anne Roe, who categorized occupations by fields
and levels,

a. the decision to pursue a career is purely a conscious decision.
b. using the Strong is the best method of explaining career
choice.
c. early childhood experiences are irrelevant in terms of career
choice.
d. the choice of a career helps to satisfy an individual’s
needs.

A

d. the choice of a career helps to satisfy an individual’s

needs.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
27
Q

A 37-year-old Caucasian male states during a counseling session
that he is working as a clerk at Main Street Plumbing. This verbalization
depicts the client’s

a. career.
b. lifestyle.
c. job or position.
d. occupation.

A

c. job or position.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
28
Q

Roe recognized the role of the unconscious mind in terms of career
choice. Another theorist who emphasized the unconscious
processes in this area of study was

a. Krumboltz.
b. Parsons.
c. Super.
d. Bordin.

A

d. Bordin.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
29
Q

Edwin Bordin felt that difficulties related to job choice

a. are indicative of neurotic symptoms.
b. are indicative of inappropriate reinforcers in the environment.
c. are related to a lack of present moment awareness.
d. are the result of irrational cognitions.

A

a. are indicative of neurotic symptoms.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
30
Q

Another career theorist who drew upon psychoanalytic doctrines
was A. A. Brill. Brill emphasized _______ as an ego-defense
mechanism.

a. subliminal.
b. sublimation.
c. repression.
d. rationalization.

A

b. sublimation.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
31
Q

A client who becomes a professional football player because he
unconsciously likes to hurt people would be utilizing _______
according to Brill’s theory of career choice.

a. subliminal.
b. sublimation.
c. suppression.
d. introjection.

A

b. sublimation.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
32
Q

Today, the most popular approach to career choice reflects

a. the work of Anne Roe.
b. the work of Donald Super.
c. the work of John Holland.
d. the work of Jane Loevinger.

A

c. the work of John Holland.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
33
Q

Holland categorized _______ personality orientations which
correspond to analogous work environments.

a. two.
b. five.
c. three.
d. six.

A

d. six.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
34
Q

Most experts in the field of career counseling would classify Roe,
Brill, and Holland as _______ theorists.

a. behavior modification.
b. ego psychologists.
c. experiential.
d. personality.

A

d. personality.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
35
Q

Counselors who support John Holland’s approach believe that

a. an appropriate job allows one to express his or her personality.
b. stereotypes cannot be considered relevant.
c. four major personality categories exist.
d. sublimation is the major factor in job selection.

A

a. an appropriate job allows one to express his or her personality.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
36
Q

Holland mentioned six modal orientations: artistic, conventional,
enterprising, investigative, realistic, and social. A middle school
counselor is most likely

a. artistic.
b. social.
c. enterprising.
d. realistic.

A

b. social.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
37
Q

Holland’s theory would predict that the vice president of the
United States would be

a. artistic.
b. social.
c. enterprising
d. realistic.

A

c. enterprising

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
38
Q

A client who wishes to work on an assembly line would fi t into
Holland’s _______ typology.

a. artistic.
b. conventional.
c. social.
d. realistic.

A

d. realistic.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
39
Q

Holland’s psychological needs career personality theory would
say that a research chemist is primarily the _______ type.

a. investigative.
b. social.
c. enterprising.
d. artistic.

A

a. investigative.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
40
Q

Holland’s artistic type seems to value feelings over pure intellect
or cognitive ability. Which of the following clients would not be
best described via the artistic typology?

a. A 72-year-old part-time male ballet instructor.
b. A 29-year-old female fiction writer.
c. A 33-year-old female drill press operator.
d. A 41-year-old singer for a heavy metal rock band.

A

c. A 33-year-old female drill press operator.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
41
Q

Holland did indeed believe in career stereotypes. In other words
the person psychologically defines himself or herself via a given
job. Thus, a bookkeeper or a clerical worker would primarily fi t
into the _______ category.

a. artistic.
b. conventional.
c. realistic.
d. social.

A

b. conventional.

42
Q

In regard to an individual’s behavioral style or so-called modal
orientation, Holland believed that

a. every person has a pure or discrete orientation that fi ts
perfectly into one of the six categories.
b. occupational measures like the Strong Vocational are for
the most part useless.
c. most people are not pure personality types and thus can
best be described by a distribution of types such as Realistic,
Social, Investigative (RSI).
d. a and b.

A

c. most people are not pure personality types and thus can
best be described by a distribution of types such as Realistic,
Social, Investigative (RSI).

43
Q

Holland believed that

a. a given occupation will tend to attract persons with similar
personalities.
b. a given occupation will tend to attract persons with a very
wide range of personality attributes.
c. one’s personality is, for the most part, unrelated to one’s
occupational choice.
d. b and c.

A

a. a given occupation will tend to attract persons with similar
personalities.

44
Q

Holland relied on a personality theory of career choice. Hoppock’s
theory, based on the work of _______ is also considered a
personality approach.

a. Donald Super.
b. Robert Rosenthal.
c. David Wechsler.
d. Henry Murray.

A

d. Henry Murray.

45
Q

Developmental career theorists view career choice as an ongoing
or so-called longitudinal process rather than a single decision
made at one point in time. The pioneer theorists in this area—
who were the fi rst to forsake the matching models—were

a. Super and Roe.
b. Hoppock and Holland.
c. Ginzberg, Ginsburg, Axelrad, and Herma.
d. Brill and Bordin.

A

c. Ginzberg, Ginsburg, Axelrad, and Herma.

46
Q

Ginzberg and his colleagues now believe in a development model
of career choice which asserts that

a. the process of choosing a career does not end at age 20 or
adulthood.
b. career choice decisions are really made throughout the
life span.
c. career choice is reversible.
d. all of the above.

A

d. all of the above.

47
Q

Initially, Ginzberg and his associates viewed career choice as irreversible
and the result of compromises between wishes and
realistic possibilities. This theory identified three stages of career
development

a. informal, formal, and concrete.
b. fantasy (birth to age 11), tentative (ages 11 to 17), and
realistic (age 17 to early 20s).
c. sensorimotor, formal, and concrete.
d. oral, anal, and phallic.

A

b. fantasy (birth to age 11), tentative (ages 11 to 17), and

realistic (age 17 to early 20s).

48
Q

The most popular developmental career theorist is Donald Super.
Super emphasizes

a. id impulses.
b. the critical parent.
c. the self-concept.
d. ego strength.

A

c. the self-concept.

49
Q

Super’s theory emphasizes _______ life stages.

a. five.
b. four.
c. three.
d. nine.

A

a. five.

50
Q

Super’s theory includes

a. the life-career rainbow.
b. the life-career stars.
c. the life-career moon.
d. the life-career psychosis.

A

a. the life-career rainbow.

51
Q

Research into the phenomenon of career maturity reflects the
work of

a. John Crites.
b. Roe.
c. Holland.
d. Schlossberg.

A

a. John Crites.

52
Q

The decision-making theory, which refers to periods of anticipation
and implementation/adjustment, was proposed by

a. Crites.
b. Holland.
c. David Tiedeman and Robert O’Hara.
d. Super.

A

c. David Tiedeman and Robert O’Hara.

53
Q

John Krumboltz postulated a social learning approach to career
choice. This model is based mainly on the work of

a. Joseph Wolpe.
b. Albert Bandura.
c. Donald Super.
d. Karen Homey.

A

b. Albert Bandura.

54
Q

The model Krumboltz suggested is

a. a human capital theory.
b. an accident theory of career development.
c. a status attainment theory.
d. a behavioristic model of career development.

A

d. a behavioristic model of career development.

55
Q

A counselor who favors a behavioristic mode of career counseling
would most likely

a. analyze dreams related to jobs and/or occupations.
b. give the client a standardized career test.
c. suggest a site visit to a work setting.
d. a and b.

A

c. suggest a site visit to a work setting.

56
Q

A fairly recent model to explain career development is the decision
approach. The Gelatt Decision Model created by Harry B. Gelatt refers to information as “the fuel of the decision.” The
Gelatt Model asserts that information can be organized into
three systems

a. predictive, value, and decision.
b. internal, external, and in between.
c. predictive, external, and internal.
d. internal and external.

A

a. predictive, value, and decision.

57
Q

In the Gelatt Model the predictive system deals with

a. personal likes, dislikes, and preferences.
b. personal rules.
c. alternatives and the probability of outcomes.
d. the self-directed search.

A

c. alternatives and the probability of outcomes.

58
Q

Linda Gottfredson’s developmental theory of career focuses on

a. fields and levels.
b. circumscription and compromise theory.
c. the career rainbow.
d. mainly on the concept of career maturity.

A

b. circumscription and compromise theory.

59
Q

The leading method adults use to find career information in the
United States is

a. to see a state employment counselor.
b. to visit a private practice career counselor.
c. to undergo counseling with a counselor with NCCC credentials.
d. by securing information via the newspaper.

A

d. by securing information via the newspaper.

60
Q

When career counselors speak of the OOH they are referring
to

a. the Occupational Options Handbook.
b. the Occupational Outlook Handbook.
c. the Career Options Occupational Titles.
d. the Optional Occupations Handbook.

A

b. the Occupational Outlook Handbook.

61
Q

At its zenith the DOT listed

a. approximately 10,000 job titles.
b. nearly 5,000 job titles.
c. approximately 30,000 job titles.
d. nearly 100,000 job titles.

A

c. approximately 30,000 job titles.

62
Q

In the Dictionary of Occupational Titles each job was given a
_______ digit code.

a. nine.
b. eight.
c. six.
d. five.

A

a. nine.

63
Q

The DOT was fi rst published by the Department of Labor in
1939. The fi rst three digits in a DOT code referred to

a. an occupational group.
b. career options.
c. OOH data.
d. the transfer of skills.

A

a. an occupational group.

64
Q

You are working as a counselor for a major university. A student
wants detailed statistics about the average wages in her state.
The best resource would be

a. Richard N. Bolles’s book What Color Is Your Parachute?
b. The Bureau of Labor Statistics website.
c. Any professional journal related to career counseling is
inundated with articles of this nature.
d. DISCOVER and the System of Interactive Guidance and
Information known as Sigi Plus.

A

b. The Bureau of Labor Statistics website.

65
Q

A counselor who is interested in trends in the job market should
consult the

a. State Department of Economic Regulation.
b. SOC.
c. SIC.
d. OOH.

A

d. OOH.

66
Q

A counselor wants to suggest an easy-to-read source for a client
in search of career information. The counselor should recommend

a. DOT.
b. SOC.
c. SIC.
d. OOH.

A

d. OOH.

67
Q

A counselor with a master’s degree who is working for minimum
wage at a fast-food restaurant due to a lack of jobs in the field is
a victim of

a. unemployment.
b. underemployment.
c. the phi phenomenon.
d. the risky shift phenomenon.

A

b. underemployment.

68
Q

The OOH contains approximately 800 job descriptions. Job
trends suggest that

a. less women will be employed.
b. less minorities will be employed.
c. service jobs will account for virtually all the job growth.
d. jobs dealing with computers have peaked and will rapidly
decline.

A

c. service jobs will account for virtually all the job growth.

69
Q

The Guide for Occupational Exploration (GOE) was published
by the U.S. Department of Labor. The guide lists groups of jobs
listed in

a. 14 interest areas.
b. 6 interest areas.
c. 3 interest areas.
d. 175 interest areas.

A

a. 14 interest areas.

70
Q

Self-efficacy theory is based on the work of

a. Roe.
b. Holland.
c. H. B. Gelatt.
d. Albert Bandura.

A

d. Albert Bandura.

71
Q

SIGI Plus, Choices, and Discover are

a. Computer Assisted Career Guidance Systems (CACG).
b. paper and pencil career tests.
c. career theories proposed in the 1940s.
d. computer systems which are slower to use than traditional
texts such as the DOT or the OOH.

A

a. Computer Assisted Career Guidance Systems (CACG).

72
Q

A client who likes her flower arranging job begins doing fl ower
arranging in her spare time on weekends and after work. This
phenomenon is best described as

a. the contrast effect.
b. sublimation.
c. the compensatory effect.
d. spillover.

A

d. spillover.

73
Q

A male client who hates his job is trying desperately to be the
perfect father, husband, and family man. This phenomenon is
best described as

a. the recency effect.
b. the leniency/strictness bias.
c. the compensatory effect.
d. spillover.

A

c. the compensatory effect.

74
Q

The National Vocational Guidance Association was founded in
1913. It was fused with other organizations in 1952 to become

a. the American Psychological Association.
b. AACD.
c. APGA.
d. NASW.

A

c. APGA.

75
Q

Lifestyle includes

a. work.
b. leisure.
c. style of living.
d. all of the above.

A

d. all of the above.

76
Q

The Strong Interest Inventory (SCII) is based on John Holland’s
theory. The test assumes that a person who is interested in a
given subject will experience

a. satisfaction in a job with workers who have different interests.
b. satisfaction in a job in which those working in the occupation
have similar interests.
c. generalized anxiety if he or she is placed in a job where
people have similar interests.
d. the best results if he or she fi nishes the inventory in one
hour or less.

A

b. satisfaction in a job in which those working in the occupation
have similar interests.

77
Q

The Self-Directed Search (SDS) is

a. based on the work of Holland and yields scores on his six
types.
b. self-administered.
c. self-scored and self-interpreted.
d. all of the above.
A

d. all of the above.

78
Q

At a case staffi ng, one career counselor says to another, “The
client’s disability suggests she can only physically handle sedentary
work.” This technically implies

a. the client will not need to lift over 10 pounds.
b. the client will not need to lift over 100 pounds.
c. the client will be standing a lot.
d. the client could walk or stand up to six hours daily.

A

a. the client will not need to lift over 10 pounds.

79
Q

The notion of the hidden job market would suggest that

a. most jobs will appear on college bulletin boards.
b. most jobs will appear in supermarket tabloids.
c. most jobs will appear in daily newspaper classifi ed ads.
d. most jobs are not advertised.

A

d. most jobs are not advertised.

80
Q

An SDS score will reveal

a. career aptitude.
b. the personality via projective measures.
c. the individual’s three highest scores based on Holland’s
personality types.
d. spillover personality tendencies.

A

c. the individual’s three highest scores based on Holland’s

personality types.

81
Q

As you walk into a professional seminar on career counseling you
note that the instructor is drawing a hexagon on the blackboard.
The instructor is most likely discussing

a. David Tiedeman.
b. John Holland.
c. Anne Roe.
d. John Crites.

A

b. John Holland.

82
Q

The Strong is considered an Interest inventory. So is

a. the Kuder, created by George Frederic Kuder.
b. the Wechsler.
c. the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test.
d. the MMPI-2.

A

a. the Kuder, created by George Frederic Kuder.

83
Q

The U.S. Employment Service created the

a. ASVAB.
b. DAT.
c. GATB.
d. SCII.

A

c. GATB.

84
Q

Occupational aptitude tests such as the Differential Aptitude
Test (DAT), the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Test Battery
(ASVAB), and the O*NET Ability Profi ler grew out of the

a. cognitive therapy movement.
b. humanistic psychology movement.
c. individual psychology movement.
d. trait-and-factor movement related to career counseling.

A

d. trait-and-factor movement related to career counseling.

85
Q

A client says she has always stayed home and raised her children.
Now the children are grown and she is seeking employment.
She is best described

a. as a displaced homemaker.
b. as a victim of underemployment.
c. by a DSM diagnosis.
d. as a victim of the hidden job market.

A

a. as a displaced homemaker.

86
Q

According to the concept of wage discrimination

a. women make more than men for doing the same job.
b. women make less than men for doing the same job.
c. men and women make identical salaries thanks to legislation.
d. women who are seen as attractive still make 6% more
than men for doing the same job.

A

b. women make less than men for doing the same job.

87
Q

According to the concept of occupational sex segregation

a. most women hold high paying executive jobs.
b. most women hold low paying jobs with low status.
c. most women hold jobs which require a college degree.
d. men still make considerably less than women.

A

b. most women hold low paying jobs with low status.

88
Q

A counselor advises a female to steer clear of police work as he
feels this is a male occupation. This suggests

a. positive transference.
b. negative transference.
c. counselor bias based on gender bias.
d. sex wage discrimination.

A

c. counselor bias based on gender bias.

89
Q

Most research would suggest that a woman who has the same
intelligence, skills, and potential as a man will often

a. make the same job choice as a man.
b. choose a supervisory position more often than a man.
c. have lower career aspirations than a man.
d. choose a career well above her ability level.

A

c. have lower career aspirations than a man.

90
Q
  1. A displaced homemaker might have grown children or

a. be widowed and seeking employment.
b. be divorced and seeking employment.
c. a and b.
d. none of the above.

A

c. a and b.

91
Q

Midlife career change

a. is not that unusual.
b. is often discussed, but in reality is very rare.
c. would be extremely rare after the death of a spouse.
d. would be extremely rare after all the children leave
home.

A

a. is not that unusual.

92
Q

The term reentry woman would best describe

a. a 32-year-old female police offi cer promoted to sergeant.
b. a 22-year-old female teacher who becomes a school counselor.
c. a 59-year-old female administrative assistant who switched
positions for two years and will return to her job.
d. a 29-year-old female who was babysitting in her home but
is currently working at a fast-food restaurant.

A

d. a 29-year-old female who was babysitting in her home but

is currently working at a fast-food restaurant.

93
Q

A counselor doing multicultural career counseling should be
aware

a. of his or her own ethnocentric biases.
b. that Asian Americans rarely choose scientifi c careers.
c. that Black males will often choose enterprising jobs in
terms of Holland’s typology.
d. that career inventories have eliminated cultural biases.

A

a. of his or her own ethnocentric biases.

94
Q

In terms of the labor market

a. music is very effective in terms of increasing the workers’
output.
b. the number of employees employers want to hire goes
down as salary goes up.
c. the number of employees willing to work for you goes up
as the salary increases.
d. b and c.

A

d. b and c.

95
Q

SIGI Plus is

a. an achievement test.
b. a personality test used in career counseling.
c. a computer career program known as the System of Interactive
Guidance and Information that allows students to
conduct a self-assessment and explore career options.
d. a computerized projective test for career counseling.

A

c. a computer career program known as the System of Interactive
Guidance and Information that allows students to
conduct a self-assessment and explore career options.

96
Q

A career counselor who is helping a client design a resume

a. should downplay the value of the cover letter.
b. should emphasize that a lengthy resume is invariably
more effective.
c. should emphasize the importance of listing height and
weight data.
d. should emphasize the importance of a cover letter.

A

d. should emphasize the importance of a cover letter.

97
Q

Most experts would agree that a resume

a. is like an art project and must look good.
b. is not an art project and looks have little if anything to do
with effectiveness.
c. need not utilize bold headings as personnel offi cers often
spend an extensive amount of time reading them.
d. contrary to popular opinion, can sport typos and spelling
errors yet still have a powerful impact on future employers.

A

a. is like an art project and must look good.

98
Q

The concept of job clubs as promoted by Azrin et al.

a. is very behavioristic.
b. is indicative of a client-centered approach.
c. is psychodynamic.
d. is appropriate, but not with disabled populations.

A

a. is very behavioristic.

99
Q

Which counselor would most likely say that we choose a job to
meet our needs?

a. Albert Ellis.
b. John O. Crites.
c. John Krumboltz
d. Robert Hoppock.

A

d. Robert Hoppock.

100
Q

All of the following are difficulties with career testing except

a. stereotyping.
b. the tests all take at least three hours to administer.
c. the counselor may rely too heavily on test results.
d. many tests are biased in favor of White middle-class
clients.

A

b. the tests all take at least three hours to administer.