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The Development and Initial Validation of a Scale to Assess Career Goal Discrepancies
Author(s) -
Peter A. Creed,
Michelle Hood
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of career assessment
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.07
H-Index - 59
eISSN - 1552-4590
pISSN - 1069-0727
DOI - 10.1177/1069072714535175
Subject(s) - psychology , career development , confirmatory factor analysis , scale (ratio) , construct (python library) , exploratory factor analysis , goal orientation , goal setting , sample (material) , population , construct validity , agency (philosophy) , applied psychology , psychometrics , social psychology , developmental psychology , structural equation modeling , philosophy , statistics , physics , chemistry , mathematics , demography , epistemology , chromatography , quantum mechanics , sociology , computer science , programming language
Career goal discrepancy, which is at the heart of goal-oriented, career models of motivation and agency, is the perceived gap between an individual's career goal (i.e., future self or situation) and the progress being made toward achieving that goal (i.e., current self or situation). There are no existing scales that assess this construct. To progress research in this area, we devised a brief, 12-item measure suitable for use with young adults. Devising a scale for this population is appropriate, as young adulthood is the age when occupational goals and occupational goal progress are important foci. We generated initial items for four underlying domains of goal discrepancy (achievement, effort, ability, and standard discrepancy), had the items rated by experts, and then administered them to a large, diverse sample of young adults (N = 615, mean age 20.9 years). We reduced the number of items and tested the factor structure of the scale using exploratory factor analysis, confirmed the structure on a holdout sample using confirmatory factor analysis, and assessed construct validity by testing hypothesized relationships with existing measures (career goal commitment and career distress). Being able to assess discrepancy in the career domain will stimulate research into the career development of young adults and will allow practitioners to explore issues around career goal setting and adaptive responses to career setbacks.Griffith Health, School of Applied PsychologyFull Tex

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