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Welcome to the updated listing of web sites
that are shared in Your Career Planner, Kendall Hunt, 2002. We hope that this
listing makes it easier to use your book and ensures that you have the most
up-to-date information and sites relevant to the topics discussed. You may want
to bookmark this site to refer back to it throughout the course, or feel free to
print it out (but check back regularly for updates!).
Below
the sites are listed by chapter. You may click on the chapter title to go to the
links or scroll down the page. Changes are indicated in RED.
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Web Connect
(page 6)
If you'd like to read a summary from
Jeremy Rifkin's "The End of Work," you can
do so by going to www.eff.org/Publications/E-journals/CyRev/cyrev3.html
and clicking on Creating Jobs in the
Third Sector: The Alternative to Welfare. http://www.leadershipadvantage.com/futureOfWork.shtml.
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Web Connect
(page 13)
Reading
about the
constant changes affecting careers and development enhance your ability to
plan your career and maintain your employability. The article briefs
provided by New Work News
www.newwork.com can help you stay on
top of business news that impacts career mobility. Fast
Company’s article entitled New
Economy 101
is no longer available. Instead, we recommend an even more up-to-date
article called New
Leaders, New Agenda
at www.fastcompany.com/online/58/one.html.
This article profiles six business leaders and all discuss how they handle
changes and challenges in the New Economy.
If you’d like to read more about the changes
affecting career decision-making, check out the Population Reference
Bureau’s Report on America: The Career Quandry at http://www.prb.org/Template.cfm?Section=PRB&template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&ContentID=3541.
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Web Connect
(page 17)
Managing transitions is key to
self-development. For additional articles on transitions, such as How You
Can Handle Change Better, check out William Bridges and Associates at www.wmbridges.com. |
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Web Connect
(page 29)
If you’re interested in reading more about the influence of technology on
careers, recruitment and other areas, take a look at the wealth of
information available on NUA Internet Surveys at
www.nua.com/surveys
(click on “Recruitment”).
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E-Networking and Communities (page 32)
If
you’re not comfortable with e-communication, then we suggest that you read
Networking on the Internet at http://dlis.gseis.ucla.edu/people/pagre/network.html
by Phil Agre. This 70+ page article, in my opinion, is the best guidance
for online networking. It is geared toward doctoral students, but the
guidance, overall, is applicable to all students.
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Career Guidance and Coaching (page 32)
On the
other hand, there are some online guidance sites that can be helpful, such
as The Washington
Post’s
online career advice at www.washingtonpost.com
(click on Washington
Jobs on
the top right tab on the home page and
then click on News and Advice on the career pages). This site—and other
similar sites tend to write more generally about career planning topics.
They allow you to post questions to career experts, but also allow you to go
through the other questions and responses as well.
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Web Connect
(page 36)
To read more about the impact of technology on jobs, careers and
business, check out On the Edge of the Digital Age at www.startribune.com/stonline/html/digage/logfx.htm.
This article series provides a fascinating look at how the author believes
the “Digital Age” is evolving and what it will be like, based on
numerous interviews with key experts and more than 50 books on the subject.
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 | Web Connect
(page 38)
The list of
skills on the following pages is quite extensive. However, if you wish to
identify additional skills or think that the list of skills don’t fully
represent your abilities, you may add skills to the lists by going to Creative
Job Search’s Online Guide at
www.amby.com/worksite/cjs/cjsbook2/skill6d.htm.
This
site also helps you identify the adaptive skills that characterize you. We
suggest that you carefully write in the additional skills selected under the
appropriate heading. The skill labels on the web site are slightly different
than the ones we’ve listed here, so here is some guidance: The job skills
listed at the beginning fall under “I. Functional Skills” heading. The
self-management skills in the second section fall under “II. Self
Management Skills.” The remaining skills listed under the transferable
skills section all fall under “I. Functional Skills” category. For the
purpose of this exercise, you only need to be concerned about placing these
skills under one of the two headings—you needn’t be concerned as to
whether or not you have them in the correct subcategory.
An
extensive list of transferable interpersonal and technical skills for “I.
Functional Skills” can be found on the web site Skills Zone at
www.pch.gc.ca/Cyberstation/html/szone2_e.htm.
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 | Web Connect
(page 49)
You may have previously used library
references, such as The Guide to Occupational Exploration (GOE)
and The Dictionary of Occupational Titles (DOT) to explore careers.
Now, however, these references have been replaced by a dynamic and useful
online program called O*NET. The O*NET Online can be found at http://online.onetcenter.org.
This site will be helpful in exploring career options with regard to the
skills, knowledge and abilities needed in the job, educational requirements,
relevant occupations, and tips and links to help you find the right career
activities for your interests and skills.
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Web Connect
(page 51)
For ideas on additional self
management skills, go back to Creative
Job Search’s Online Guide
at www.amby.com/worksite/cjs/cjsbook2/skill6d.htm
and scroll down to the second section titled “Self Management Skills.”
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Web Connect
(page 57)
Still
stumped? If you’re struggling to come up with a list of special knowledge
skills, try going to one of the major online job banks, such as Monster.com
www.monster.com, and search for job
descriptions that may represent work, leisure, intern, volunteer, or other
activities in which you have engaged during your life. Next, review the jobs
and see if you can cull skills from the job descriptions. As for identifying
knowledge gained through learning, try going onto your school’s web site
and searching for descriptions of previous courses you have taken. |
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Web Connect
(page 64)
Emotional intelligence is
increasingly a topic of interest in business and industries around the
world. More and more research is contributing to this interest, including
research that demonstrates how emotional intelligence is related to IQ and
career success. To read an interesting article on this, visit the ERIC site
a http://ericacve.org/docgen.asp?tbl=tia&ID=132.
This ERIC article is no longer available. However, the
Harvard Magazine has a similar article at http://www.harvardmagazine.com/on-line/0301143.html.
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If you’re interested in additional
information about how the brain works and how it impacts your health,
emotions, career, IQ, success, and other areas of your life, you may be
interested in looking at the information available through the International
Brain Research Organization at www.ibro.org
as well as the numerous interesting articles available on Brain.com
at www.brain.com.
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Web Connect
(page 96)
A popular assessment with college students is the Career Key at www.ncsu.edu/careerkey. This assessment looks at interests, abilities, and values. It
provides a
Holland
code in the results with job titles that reflect the interests of others who
share that code. The job titles are linked to information in the
Occupational Outlook Handbook.
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 | Web Connect
(page 97)
If you don’t have access to the MBTI, Personality Type.com at http://www.personalitytype.com/quiz.asp
provides a mini-version of this assessment to help you quickly self-identify
your “type.” There is no cost involved, but note that this is not a
reliable nor valid personality instrument either. Once you identify your
type, the site then provides useful information related to your personality
and interests. This quiz is part of the site designed by Barbara
Barron-Tieger & Paul Tieger who have written many books about
personality type and its relevance to careers. Also, once you do know your
MBTI four-letter personality type, you might find Type Logic’s site
of interest at www.typelogic.com.
A popular personality assessment with college students is the Kiersey
Temperament Sorter II at www.advisorteam.com/user/ktsintro.asp.
This tool aims to assess temperament by asking 70 questions and
providing personality information very similar to that of the Myers Briggs
Personality Type Indicator.
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Web Connect
(page 103)
Take a look at the interests and profiles of
others who match your personality type by playing the Career Interests
Game at http://career.missouri.edu/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=146
This game was designed by the University of Missouri-Columbia and is an
adaptation of Holland’s RIASEC model.
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Web Connect
(page 122)
The
Computer Information Systems Interests Game
is no longer available and we have not identified another game that offers
similar and appropriate information.
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Web Connect
(page 125)
If you didn’t take the chance to look at this site in the last
chapter, you may want to take a look at it now.
The Career Interests Game at http://career.missouri.edu/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=146
allows you to explore careers that match the personality style of those
similar to you. This game was designed by the University of
Missouri-Columbia and is an adaptation of
Holland
’s RIASEC model.
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Web Connect
(page 128)
You may already have the sense
that you have chosen the right major, but still at a loss as to what type of
work within that major would make you the happiest. What Can I do with
this Major? found at (the web address is different
from the one in the book)
http://career.utk.edu/students/majors.asp as developed by the University
of
Tennessee’s Career Services. It is a great site to explore careers that are related
to your major. It covers more than 40 majors and for each major, it provides
information on common career areas,
typical employers, and strategies designed to maximize career opportunities.
In the section “Links” each major contains a listing websites that
provide additional career-related information. If you don’t find your
major here, try the University
of Delaware’s Major Resource Kits (70+
majors covered) at www.udel.edu/CSC/mrk.html.
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Web Connect
(page 139)
Career Perfect’s Work Preference Inventory at (the
following web site is different from the one in the book)
www.careerperfect.com/CareerPerfect/cpWorkPrefInv.htm
can help you identify your work
preferences based on personal work values. This is a simple 24-question
tool, which produces results that help understand better how you view
different aspects of work, such as work style, management style, learning
style and preferences for carrying out work tasks.
If you are interested in additional insight with regard to work
preferences, you may be interested in completing
The Princeton Review Career
Quiz at www.review.com/career/careerquizhome.cfm?menuID=0&careers=6.
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Web Connect
(page 149)
The University of Waterloo’s Values Assessment at
(the following web site is different from the
one in the book)
www.cdm.uwaterloo.ca/Step1_3.asp
may also help you uncover some hidden values.
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(NOTE: This site is not in the book, but may be useful
to some students)
California State University has
developed a user-friendly decision-making model on its web site at www.csulb.edu/~tstevens/c15-carp.htm.
Once you get to this site, click on “Step 4: Make a Decision” for a
different approach to help you make a career decision.
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Web Connect
(page 160)
O*NET information can be found at (the
following web site is different from the one in the book) http://online.onetcenter.org.
This
database provides information such as skills, knowledge, abilities,
interests, and work values, as well as links to other sources of data, such
as census and labor market information. Through the information you find
here, you can assess and compare the data for different occupations to
evaluate the similarities of various fields of work. O*NET Online has simple
user instructions on almost every page and an on-line Help section
accessible from every page.
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Web Connect
(page 160)
The
Career Exploration Links provided by UC Berkeley at www.uhs.berkeley.edu/Students/CareerLibrary/links/occup.cfm
is a great resource to assist you with your career research.
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Web Connect
(page 166)
The Occupational Outlook Handbook at www.bls.gov/oco
can also be helpful with your research.
It is a nationally recognized source of career information, designed to
provide valuable assistance to individuals making decisions about their
future work lives. Revised every two years, the Handbook
describes what workers do on the job, working conditions, the training and
education needed, earnings, and expected job prospects in a wide range of
occupations. You may want to broaden your research by visiting the Career
Guide to Industries at www.bls.gov/oco/cg/home.htm.
This companion piece to the
OOH provides information on available careers by industry, including the
nature of the industry, working conditions, employment, occupations in the
industry, training and advancement, earnings and benefits, employment
outlook, and lists of organizations that can provide additional information.
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Web
Connect
(page 169)
California State
University has
developed a user-friendly decision-making model on its web site at
www.csulb.edu/~tstevens/c15-carp.htm.
Once you get to this site, click on “Step 4: Make a Decision” for a
different approach to help you make a career decision.
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Web Connect
(page 196)
Office Team at www.officeteam.com/OT/FactSheet
conducted an Office of the Future study, which resulted in some
interesting thoughts on where careers and organizations are headed as early
as 2005. You may be interested
in checking out this fact sheet to spark some additional ideas on what
trends may impact your career goals and objectives.
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Web Connect
(page 209)
If you’d like to go through
the decision making, goal setting and career action planning process online,
the
University
of
Waterloo
in
Canada
has an outstanding site for career-decision making at www.adm.uwaterloo.ca/infocecs/CRC/manual-home.html
or the new site at www.cdm.uwaterloo.ca. Scroll down the left column until you see the “Decision-Making”
section and then work your way through the various pieces of it to result in
a completed career action plan.
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Web Connect
(page 223)
The Barriers
to Employment site is no longer available. Instead, we suggest the
following: Barriers/Challenges to Career-Decision Making at
www.langara.bc.ca/counselling/career/barriers.html.
This site offers a brief introduction to some of the barriers that college
students face when making career decisions. Also,
Identifying Barriers at
www.islandnet.com/careerpathadventures/planning/barriers2.html
is a helpful list of both external and internal barriers. After reading
through both lists and identifying your own barriers, click on Overcome the Barriers to gather some ideas on how to tackle
them.
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Web Connect
(page 224)
If you’re interested in
reading about how others have created self-empowering lives, visit ThriveNet’s
site at www.thrivenet.com and go
through some of the articles.
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Web Connect
(page 242)
To find helpful examples of
resumes for more than 20 different career fields, check out College Grad’s
collection at www.collegegrad.com/resumes/index.shtml.
This site also has an interesting section called Best College Resumes. This
site should help you get a great start with your resume.
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Web Connect
(page 245)
Computer-friendly and
electronic resumes are written differently than the traditional paper
resume. For an e-course on how to write electronic resumes, we recommend two
different sites: ProvenResumes at www.provenresumes.com/reswkshps/electronic/electrespg1.html
offers tips on how to write an e-resume. Note that the
eResume site still exists at www.eResume.com, but no longer offers the list
of key words referred to in the book. Instead, we recommend that you use a
combination of the following lists: University of California, Riverside's
Keywords by Subject at www.careers.ucr.edu/Students/JobSearch/nouns.html
and the Argus Technical Services site at www.argus-tech.com/resume/other-ke.htm.
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Web Connect
(page 251)
As mentioned in Chapter 2 Virtual
Career Planning, we recommend that you read the 40+ page article titled
Networking on the Internet at http://dlis.gseis.ucla.edu/people/pagre/network.html
by Phil Agre.
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Web Connect
(page 251)
The Internet has made it
incredibly easy to find people for whom you don’t have contact
information. One site called Telephone Directories on the Web at (the
following web site is different from the one in the book) www.infobel.com/teldir/default.asp
will link you to over 350 directories for businesses, individuals,
fax numbers, and e-mail addresses in the
United States
as well as more than 180 countries.
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Web Connect
(page 251)
Classified ads are
traditionally found in periodicals, but as you know, the Internet is
exploding with job listings. To find jobs that are relevant to your career,
check out the career-specific pages with links to these job banks on the Riley
Guide at www.rileyguide.com/jobs.html.
If you don’t find anything that matches your career interests at this
site, then check out the job boards Airs Directory
(My Job Search is no longer available) at www.airsdirectory.com/directories/job_boards.
You will need to register, which is free. This is one of the few
registration-required sites that we recommend. Also, more than 1,000 schools participate in Monster Trak at www2.monstertrak.com/trak2000/schools/index.html,
which is an online jobs database mostly for entry level positions. Check out
this site to see if your school participates.
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Web Connect
(page 252)
You can look up your local Chamber
of Commerce, or the one located where you plan to live at http://www.uschamber.com/chambers/directory/default.htm.
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Web Connect
(page 252)
Many trade journals are now
available online through an association’s web site. To find an association
that represents your professional interests, search the more than 6,500
associations that have web sites and are searchable at the American
Society for Association Executives at http://www.asaenet.org/cda/asae/associations_search/1,3200,MEN3,00.html?AlliedSocietyCode=ALL&submit=Go%21.
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Web Connect
(page 252)
Many of the business
directories are now available in an online format. The best site to learn
about researching companies online is, in fact, called Researching
Companies Online and can be found at http://www.learnwebskills.com/company.
This site will also help you find the most appropriate online
business directory for your job search needs.
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Web Connect
(page 252)
To find the web site for the
career office at your university or college, go to JobWeb’s site at
(the
following web site is different from the one in the book) http://www.jobweb.com/Career_Development/collegeres.htm
and use their database of links to explore what information is available to
you both at the physical location of the career office as well as through
the web site.
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Web Connect
(page 254)
To find samples of letters
that address a variety of job and career-related situations, check out Career
Lab’s collection at www.careerlab.com/letters.
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Web Connect
(page 261)
Monster.com at http://tools.monster.com/archives/virtualinterviews
will help you practice your interview skills and provide feedback to help
you improve.
Cabrillo
College
in
California
also put together excellent guidance for different aspects of the interview
on their web site at (the
following web site is different from the one in the book) http://www.cabrillo.edu/services/jobs/Intguide.html.
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Web Connect
(page 264)
You can get a head start on
salary negotiations by researching salaries through one of the 300+ salary
guides on JobStar at http://jobstar.org/tools/salary/index.htm. |
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