Transcript Lecture 4
Holland’s Theory (1997)
Of Vocational Personalities
and Work Environments
Holland’s Theory
Part
of the theory’s appeal is due
to the simple and intuitively
meaningful premises on which it
is based.
Three fundamental questions:
ONE:
What characteristics of persons and
environments lead to positive vocational
outcomes (such as satisfying career
outcomes)?
• What characteristics of persons and
environments lead to negative career
outcomes?
Three fundamental questions:
TWO:
What characteristics of persons and
environments leads to career
stability or change over the lifespan?
Three fundamental questions:
THREE:
• What are the most effective ways of
providing assistance to people with
career concerns?
Holland’s underlying premise:
Career choice is an expression of
one’s personality …
– Thus, members of an occupation have
similar personalities and similar
histories.
Holland’s four working assumptions:
Assumption 1 : Most individuals can be
described in terms of their resemblance to
six personality types:
Investigative
Realistic
Artistic
Holland Types
Conventional
Enterprising
Social
Holland’s four working assumptions:
Assumption 1 (Continued):
– Each personality type has a characteristic set
of attitudes and skills to use in response to
problems encountered in the environment, and
– Each encompasses preferences for vocational
and leisure activities, life goals and values,
beliefs about oneself, and problem-solving
style.
Holland’s four working assumptions:
Assumption 1 (Continued):
– Types develop as a “product of a
characteristic interaction among a
variety of cultural and personal forces
including peers, biological heredity,
parents, social class, culture, and the
physical environment” (Holland, 1997,
p. 2)
Holland’s four working assumptions:
Assumption 1 (Continued):
– These experiences lead to an individual’s
preferring some activities over others: the
preferences then develop into strong interests,
which lead to related competencies.
– Individual’s competencies form a specific
“disposition” that allows the individual to
“think, perceive, and act in special ways.
(Holland, 1997, p. 2)
Holland’s four working assumptions:
Assumption 2:
– Environments can
be categorized as
one of six model
types:
Investigative
Realistic
Artistic
Holland Types
Conventional
Social
Enterprising
Holland’s four working assumptions:
Assumption 2:
– The environment’s type is determined
by the dominant type of the individuals
who compose that environment.
– “Where people congregate, they create
an environment that reflects the types
they most resemble” (Holland, 1997, p.
3).
Holland’s four working assumptions:
Assumption 3:
– “People search for environments that will let
them exercise their skills and abilities, express
their attitudes and values, and take on
agreeable problems and roles” (Holland, 1997,
p. 4).
– In a reciprocal manner, environments also
search for people, through activities such as
social interactions and recruitment and
selection practices.
Holland’s four working assumptions:
Assumption 4:
– Personality and environment interact to
produce behavior.
– Knowing an individual’s personality
type and the type of their environment
allows us to make predictions about a
range of possible outcomes, such as
vocational choice, job tenure and
turnover, achievement, and satisfaction.
Holland’s secondary assumptions: