Difference between revisions of "Personalities and Work"

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:At the same time, the model of American psychologist John Holland gained some popularity among [[career counselor]]s. John Holland matched two [[personality dimension]]s, disruptive versus conforming and individual versus collective, with six groups of ''occupations''. His groups are [[realistic occupation|realistic]], [[artistic occupation|artistic]], [[realistic occupation|realistic]], [[social occupation|social]], [[enterprising occupation|enterprising]], and [[conventional occupation|conventional]].  
 
:At the same time, the model of American psychologist John Holland gained some popularity among [[career counselor]]s. John Holland matched two [[personality dimension]]s, disruptive versus conforming and individual versus collective, with six groups of ''occupations''. His groups are [[realistic occupation|realistic]], [[artistic occupation|artistic]], [[realistic occupation|realistic]], [[social occupation|social]], [[enterprising occupation|enterprising]], and [[conventional occupation|conventional]].  
  
:This model is called the [[Holland Occupational Themes]]; the [[Occupational Information Network]] utilizes this model in its "Interests" section.
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:This model is called the [[Holland Occupational Themes]]; the [[Occupational Information Network]] utilizes this model in its [[occupational interest|Interest]]s section.
  
 
'''[[Occupational Themes]]''' is the successor [[lectio]].
 
'''[[Occupational Themes]]''' is the successor [[lectio]].
  
 
==Quiz==
 
==Quiz==

Revision as of 01:57, 5 May 2020

Personalities and Work (hereinafter, the Lectio) is the second lesson part of the Nature of Occupations lesson that introduces its participants to occupations and related topics.

This lesson belongs to the Introduction to Employment session of the CNM Cyber Orientation. The Orientation is the second stage of the WorldOpp Pipeline.


Content

The predecessor lectio is What Occupation Is.

Key terms

Personality. The unique combination of emotional, thought, and behavioral patterns that affect how a person reacts to situations and interacts with others.

Script

Many psychologists have studied the idea to match personalities and occupations. Logically, artists tend to be more disruptive personalities than accountants. Vice versa, accountants tend to be more conforming personalities than artists.
Fortunately or unfortunately, no single personality framework fully describes a personality and no one can predict the performance of a particular employee depending on the personality.
The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) was originally developed to identify students' aptitudes toward various professions. This personality test taps four characteristics and classifies people into one of 16 personality types.
Every characteristic contributes one letter from the following pairs:
For instance, INFP would stand for an intuitive, feeling, perceiving introvert.
Although a few employers collect MBTI data, this test has little-to-no effect in the workspace. A successful sport team, for instance, should be a mosaic of personalities regardless of the fact that all of them would share the same occupation.
At the same time, the model of American psychologist John Holland gained some popularity among career counselors. John Holland matched two personality dimensions, disruptive versus conforming and individual versus collective, with six groups of occupations. His groups are realistic, artistic, realistic, social, enterprising, and conventional.
This model is called the Holland Occupational Themes; the Occupational Information Network utilizes this model in its Interests section.

Occupational Themes is the successor lectio.

Quiz