CAREER GUIDANCE PROGRAM Developed by Samuel B. Batara
CAREER GUIDANCE PROGRAM Developed by Samuel B. Batara
1. To help individuals make decisions and choices involved in planning a future and building a career, or in choosing an occupation, preparing for it, entering it
and preparing for it;
2. To assist the students to form valuable impressions and a general understanding about the world of work and workers, to develop positive attitudes relating to
occupations and the people who hold them, and to impress upon the student the importance of learning about his attitudes and of such values as promptness,
regularity, industry and smooth working relationships with others;
3. To facilitate students’ understanding of the many reasons for working, of the many ways to measure the value and worth of an occupation, of the things on
which the peace and satisfaction in one’s occupation depend, and of the factors that make a job well done;
4. To develop students’ awareness of the important relationships between their academic studies and their dim and distant occupation, to enable then see their
school work as a form of occupation, and to get them relate a chosen occupation to one’s total self, education, knowledge, skills and interests;
5. To select, collect and disseminate vocational information and occupational materials, to seek occupational facts through the media and other agencies, to
discriminate between unreliable and acceptable materials, and to make these available to assist students make appropriate decisions and choices;
6. To orient the students to the methods of locating and using available information sources of the school and the community for the purpose of obtaining,
analyzing, and using facts about jobs, job requirements and preparation, industries, work processes, employment trends and opportunities, qualifications and
remunerations, and other pertinent information;
7. To stimulate students’ participation in curricular and co-curricular activities that are essential in aiding one’s entry into such wider activities in the
community; and to make way for and encourage students to explore occupational interests through practical job experiences as part of the educative process;
8. To offer assistance to students in planning the job-seeking process, in finding an appropriate place in the world of work, in making choices consistent with
one’s aptitudes and interests, in achieving the particular placement one desires to make, and to follow him up to offer any needed assistance in making
necessary adjustments;
9. To create and update a list of agencies interested in job placement, and to develop cooperative working relationships between the school and employers and
with all agencies which may be able to provide information about job opportunities, requirements and trends; and,
10. To orient the students to the availability in the school of vocational guidance, placement services, and other career development opportunities.
FIRST SESSION: ACQUAINTANCE AND ORIENTATION
Specific Objectives Activities/Discussion Topics Persons Involved Time Frame Logistics Materials Needed
rd
Through the session, students ENCOUNTER Group members 3 Saturday of $$$ Room or Hall
a. Familiarize with each other by name, A. Acquaintanceship Group leaders semester Tables, chairs
likes and dislikes, roots and wings, “Introductions”* Facilitators Hall and light Writing board and
talents and interests “Alphabetical Order” Resource People if possible, a provided by chalk, markers,
b. share and pick program goals, basic B. Orientation on Career Guidance Guidance officers whole day affair, the school eraser, pencils,
ground rules, member roles and Program: Explanations and School before, over, and paper, name
responsibilities Open Forum Administrators after lunch Pack lunch or cards
c. discover and avail themselves of C. Information on Guidance Student Advisers pot luck by Audio visual
basic guidance services available in Services Offered; Guidance Parents members gadgets, charts,
the school Officers introduced posters
d. talk about and list down basic D. Orientation to the World of
occupations they know and indicate Work
preferences and why “Occupational Enhancement”
e. assess and express themselves, E. Self-Assessment: Voicing out of
examine their values and interests, strengths and weaknesses
strengths and weaknesses “Self-Reflection/
Confrontation…”
* NB: Italicized activities in quotation marks suggested under Activities/Discussion Topics are growth group exercises whose mechanics are detailed in Sam B.
Batara’s book Fellowship Activity Ideas