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Introduction to a New Section: Global Vision

Pope, Mark
In: The Career Development Quarterly, Jg. 56 (2007-09-01), S. 2-3
Online unknown

Introduction to a New Section: Global Vision

AUTHOR: Mark Pope
TITLE: Introduction to a New Section: Global Vision
SOURCE: The Career Development Quarterly 56 no1 2-3 S 2007
COPYRIGHT: The magazine publisher is the copyright holder of this article and it is reproduced with permission. Further reproduction of this article in violation of the copyright is prohibited.

    With this issue of The Career Development Quarterly (CDQ), we initiate a new section tided "Global Vision." Furthermore, we are retiring two sections: Personal Perspectives and Reader Reactions. There are several reasons for institutionalizing such a new section in our journal and retiring the two others.
    The Personal Perspectives section contained analyses of personal career development experiences and short editorials about critical issues in research or practice. The Reader Reactions section is self-explanatory. Their retirement is due to a lack of submissions and an intuitive feeling that their time is past. The new editor (beginning September 2008) may have other thoughts, but for now, these sections are part of our history.
    As for the new Global Vision section, although CDQ is the official journal of the National Career Development Association (NCDA) with its roots in the United States (with 5% of NCDA members from outside of the United States), CDQ has always been a journal that publishes a good number of articles from other countries. For Volume 55 (2006-2007), 8% of our articles were written by authors outside of the United States or were based on research conducted outside of the United States. For Volume 54 (2005-2006), it was 14%, and for Volume 53 (2004-2005), it was 17%. Even with the development of several other career-focused journals headquartered in such countries as Australia (Australian Journal of Career Development), Belgium (International Journal for Educational and Vocational Guidance), France (POrientation Scolaire et Professionnelle), Italy (Magellano), and the United Kingdom (Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology and Career Development International), we continue to receive substantial numbers of manuscripts from countries outside of the United States.
    I am also very pleased that the first contribution to this new section is Whitmarsh and Ritter's (2007) exceptional piece on Romania ("The Influence of Communism on Career Development and Education in Romania") and that the first article in this new volume of CDQ is the important contribution of our colleagues Young, Marshall, and Valach (2007; "Making Career Theories More Culturally Sensitive: Implications for Counseling"), in which we were able to get them to spell counseling with only one l.
    The internationalization of our profession has been noted in many recent articles published in CDQznd elsewhere. In a recent special issue of CDQ on the future of career counseling and development, each of the articles discussed this internationalization (Chung, 2003; Hansen, 2003; Harris-Bowlsbey, 2003; Herr, 2003; Niles, 2003; Parmer & Rush, 2003; Pope, 2003; Savickas, 2003; Tang, 2003; Whiston, 2003). Savickas stated with such clarity that

no longer does the career counseling profession "export" its models and methods to international colleagues who translate them for use in their own countries. Now, career counselors in numerous countries are designing and developing indigenous models, metiiods, and materials fiat suit their culture and express their preferred ways of helping otiiers. (p. 95)

    There is no one-way street to professional knowledge, and we have much to learn from one another. This is CDQ's new "global vision."

References
    Chung, Y. B. (2003). Career counseling with lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgendered persons: The next decade. The Career Development Quarterly, 52, 78-86.
    Hansen, S. S. (2003). Career counselors as advocates and change agents for equality. The Career Development Quarterly, 52, 43-53.
    Harris-Bowlsbey, J. (2003). A rich past and a future vision. The Career Development Quarterly, 52, 18-25.
    Herr, E. L. (2003). The future of career counseling as an instrument of public policy. The Career Development Quarterly, 52, 8-17.
    Niles, S. G. (2003). Career counselors confront a critical crossroad: A vision of the future. The Career Development Quarterly, 52, 70-77.
    Parmer, T., & Rush, L. C. (2003). The next decade in career counseling: Cocoon maintenance or metamorphosis? The Career Development Quarterly, 52, 26-34.
    Pope, M. (2003). Career counseling in the twenty-first century: Beyond cultural encapsulation. The Career Development Quarterly, 52, 54-60.
    Savickas, M. L. (2003). Advancing the career counseling profession: Objectives and strategies for the next decade. The Career Development Quarterly, 52, 87-96.
    Tang, M. (2003). Career counseling in the future: Constructing, collaborating, advocating. The Career Development Quarterly, 52, 61-69.
    Whiston, S. C. (2003). Career counseling: 90 years old yet still healthy and vital. The Career Development Quarterly, 52, 35-42.
    Whitmarsh, L., & Ritter, R. (2007). The influence of Communism on career development and education in Romania. The Career Development Quarterly, 56, 85-94.
    Young, R. A., Marshall, S. K., & Valach, L. (2007). Making career theories more culturally sensitive: Implications for counseling. The Career Development Quarterly, 56, 4-18.

Titel:
Introduction to a New Section: Global Vision
Autor/in / Beteiligte Person: Pope, Mark
Link:
Zeitschrift: The Career Development Quarterly, Jg. 56 (2007-09-01), S. 2-3
Veröffentlichung: Wiley, 2007
Medientyp: unknown
ISSN: 0889-4019 (print)
DOI: 10.1002/j.2161-0045.2007.tb00015.x
Schlagwort:
  • Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management
  • media_common.quotation_subject
  • Section (typography)
  • Library science
  • Spell
  • Internationalization
  • Feeling
  • Law
  • Vocational education
  • Sociology
  • General Psychology
  • Applied Psychology
  • Communism
  • Career counseling
  • Career development
  • media_common
Sonstiges:
  • Nachgewiesen in: OpenAIRE
  • Rights: CLOSED

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