The influential role of parent's in Career Selection
- DR Ashwinikumar Gupta
- Jan 25, 2020
- 2 min read
Updated: Feb 2, 2020


Parents function a significant influence on their children’s career development and career decision- making.
Parents want their children to hunt out happiness and success in life and one factor which influences happiness and success is career choice.
Research also indicates that when students feel supported and loved by their parents, they have more confidence in their own ability to research careers.
They choose a career which may be interesting and exciting, this is often important because studies show that adolescents who feel competent regarding career decision-making, tend to make more satisfying career choices later in life.
Parents influence the extent of education or training that their children achieve; the knowledge they have about work and different occupations; the beliefs and attitudes they have to work, and thus the motivation they have to succeed.
Most of this is often learned unconsciously – children and teenagers absorb their parent's attitudes and expectations of them as they grow old.
Excessive parental control regarding adolescents' occupational decision-making leads to negative outcomes. A parent must recognize that their role is just to act as a facilitator in their child’s career journey and allowing independent career choices marks a young person first real step into adulthood.
»»» Some of the key influencers are: ---The expectations parents have for his or her children's education and career. ---The example they set for his or her children. ---The values they show to their family, friends, and society. ---The opportunities they provide their children to find out and develop. ---The kind of parent-child relationship they develop.
»»»Tips to assist your child’s career development:
---Encourage your children to urge the maximum amount of education as possible. ---Help them to get their innate talents and skills. ---Develop their knowledge of the planet of labor. ---Teach them decision- making skills. ---Value gender equity and cultural diversity. ---Become conscious of career resources/ education and training opportunities. ---Observe the consequences of labor experience.
»»» Look out for the danger signs in your child's approach:
---Waiting until the eleventh hour to form decisions. ---Unrealistic expectations. ---Promises to figure miracles with study next term. ---Carrying too many higher -level subjects in spite of poor reports from teachers. ---A lax approach to homework. ---Interference from social activities or a weekend job is funding their social life. ---Selecting a course because the career is well paid. they're more likely to realize an honest end in their degree if they enjoy and have an interest within the course.
A few simple rules:

Be involved, but not in control only Advise,
but do not decide well Support, but do not dominate.



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