What are Career Development Groups?
Career Development Groups are a powerful medium through which elementary up to graduate school counselors can
In summary, groups are a superb method for professional school counselors to assist students in their individual career growth and development.
Why groups?
Schools are the land of groups and group work: Groups in one form or another happen in nearly every classroom, in countless peer interactions from student organizations to every athletic endeavor, not only in the counselor’s office. But school counselors have unique and specialized abilities to promote the effective use of group work to provide many powerful opportunities to meet a vast array of student needs.
Well-led Career Development Groups (CDG) emphasize the members and their roles in that membership. In fact, the interaction between members often initiates the content that the counselor presents in the second through the final session. The process is the complex exchanges in response and reaction to the content offered. There is an important normalcy emphasized when young people talk directly with their peers, as for many kids talking to an adult is neither easy nor desired. For one example, when students realize that their dilemma is shared by their peers, that “others’ worry about this too!”, the value is enormous. As with all psychoeducational groups, leadership responsibilities of Career Development Groups include: member selection, determining content, setting a clear and appropriate agenda, designing pace and duration, instigating effective intra-group communication, keeping to the agenda, ensuring that all members benefit from the group knowing these ways might be quite dissimilar, attending to each session’s progression, and the group’s final termination The objective being that members make personal meaning from the experience – both from the process and the content of the group!
Keys to consider as you prepare to lead Career Development Groups:
At all levels of education (primary through post-graduate) CDGs might address topics such as: career-play groups in early elementary programs, or ‘explore your interests’ groups; career-shadowing groups in middle schools and academic and career-direction groups in middle and high schools; college application essay groups, job interview groups, considering military service groups; and for higher education, coping with career-decision-stress groups, balancing career and relationship groups, “What am I going to do now?” groups, or the grief and joy of graduating groups.
For Example:
Here are three brief examples that emphasize potential member and the purpose of the CDGs to which they were invited:
Matthew, Kate, and Zhongjia each could “work individually” with their school counselor, but through referral to Career Development Groups these students each have the opportunity to offer as well as receive from the process. Their content is “common” and therefore the school counselors are not at a loss for recruiting appropriate members to comprise these beneficial groups. The time and effort usually pays enormous dividends.
Wrapping up
Ultimately, students will take from participating in a Career Development Group experience that which he or she finds useful at that time and place in their development. When utilizing a group method, there will be students who seem to give as much as they receive; and, there always seems to emerge a host of anticipated and unexpected benefits for all members. It is an experience not to miss.
Eds. Note: This article originally appeared in Career Convergence in 2006 and is being shared again at the start of the new school year. After this article was originally published, NCDA released the second edition of the monograph, Group Career Counseling: Principles and Practices (Pyle & Hayden, 2015). Readers are encourage to check out this helpful publication when offering groups.
Kurt L. Kraus, Ed.D., NCC, LPC, ACS
Associate Professor of Counseling
Department of Counseling and College Student Personnel
Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania
Kurt is a school counselor turned professor. He teaches courses in SU’s CACREP accredited School, Community, Mental Health, and College Student Personnel programs. Kurt conducts research and writes largely on group work. He is a Fellow in the Association for Specialists in Group Work and continues to lead groups regularly, of which he says “never ceases to rejuvenate him!” He can be reached at Email: klkrau@ship.edu