As career practitioners, we need to think about what assessment tools may be useful for our clients; and which may not. We also need to consider which tools fit with our personal career philosophy; and which may not. And we must to think about which we are experienced enough in to deliver meaningfully to our client; and which we are not. These sound like simple decisions, but balancing others and self are key aspects to having an authentic career practice.
Analyse needs. Then there are a range of considerations when bringing it all together in a practice session. Most practice sessions begin with a chat, with inviting the client to tell us about themselves, why they have come to see us, and what they are aiming to get out of the session. In career practice the session is all about the client - a Rogerian approach (1942; read more here). As we analyse needs, we need to not only understand what the client's desires are, but what they may not yet know they need help with. We may quietly run through a model such as the DOTS - aka SODI/SODA - framework (Laws & Watts, 1977; read more here), mentally checking through judicious use of questioning whether the client has a good awareness of themselves; understands transitions; is aware of opportunities available to them; and is able to make decisions about how to make those opportunities manifest. And when we are experienced in our field, we can hone in on potential gaps surprisingly quickly. We aim to work out what is important to the client, and what cultural and sociological factors shape the client's sense of self (Osborn & Zunker, 2016), and this is not about us: it is about them. If we are less culturally familiar with the client's social/cultural group, we may need to tease out a range of ideas to establish the client's comfort-, challenge- and barrier-levels are, and what type of work is off limits for socio-cultural or disability reasons (e.g. an alcoholic working in a brewery). Then we summarise back to the client what we have heard, to double-check that this is what they are wanting to achieve (Osborn & Zunker, 2016).
As part of the needs analysis, we may need to also explore anything else we have picked up on, where we wonder if the client may not yet know that they will need help with to meet their goals. More judicious questioning, listening, reframing. We gain a clearer picture, and build a relationship. We check that the client is happy (Osborn & Zunker, 2016).
Purpose of the Assessment. Now we have a much clearer idea of what the client is aiming to achieve, and begin running through our list of tools to consider what may help the client get closer to their goal. This is effectively where we "rummage through our stock room" looking for potential solutions. We may suggest possibilities to the client of both qualitative and quantitative career assessments to test how receptive they are to working with different tools, or whether the client has experienced similar types in the past. If tools have been used in the past, we are likely to explore how useful those were, and whether the client found the results to be accurate or not. As we are going through this process, we will mentally be crossing some tools off, and moving others higher on our 'possible' list (Osborn & Zunker, 2016). We double-check that whatever we aim to use will get the client closer to their stated goal.
Decide on Assessments. We may end up with one or a few of the following:
- a list of "getting to know ourselves" lenses if the client is needing self-awareness help (Osborn & Zunker, 2016)
- transition tools and techniques to help our client move from one career into another
- job search skills, CV, application letter, and informational interviewing to help our client see new opportunities available to them
- economic factors to explore, family discussions and decision-making processes to help the client make decisions about changes of direction or retraining.
Results. We help the client to use and explore the tools. We check to see if the outcome was what the client wanted. We plan next steps (Osborn & Zunker, 2016).
Repeat. We may see the client once: we may see them many times. We keep checking in with them to be sure that we are still focusing on what they want to achieve (Osborn & Zunker, 2016). We may refer on because our results were not what the client wanted (Nelson, 2014).
Sam
References:
Law, B. & Watts, A. G. (1977). Schools, Careers and Community: A study of some approaches to careers education in schools. Church Information Office.
Nelson, M. (2014). 30 Tips for New Career Counselors. National Career Development Association (NCDA). https://www.ncda.org/aws/NCDA/pt/sd/news_article/5417/_self/layout_details/fals
Osborn, D. S., & Zunker, V. G. (2016). Using Assessment Results for Career Development (9th ed.). Cengage Learning.
Rogers, C. R. (1942). Counseling and psychotherapy: newer concepts in practice. Houghton Mifflin.














