Difference between revisions of "Book of Careers"

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==Outline==
 
==Outline==
''[[Introduction to Recruiting]] is the predecessor lecture.''
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''[[Introduction to Recruitment]] is the predecessor lecture.''
  
 
#'''[[Career administration]]'''. The process or activity of running an [[enterprise]], which objectives are (a) discovering somebody's vocation, (b) identifying somebody's target occupation, (c) locating somebody's target employment, (d) analysis of somebody's [[KSA]]s, (e) development of somebody's [[employment credential]]s, and (f) landing somebody's job in the target occupation.
 
#'''[[Career administration]]'''. The process or activity of running an [[enterprise]], which objectives are (a) discovering somebody's vocation, (b) identifying somebody's target occupation, (c) locating somebody's target employment, (d) analysis of somebody's [[KSA]]s, (e) development of somebody's [[employment credential]]s, and (f) landing somebody's job in the target occupation.

Revision as of 02:10, 12 June 2018

Introduction to Career Administration (hereinafter, the Lecture) is a lecture introducing the learners to career administration. The Lecture is the fourth of five lectures of Careerprise Orientation (hereinafter, the Orientation).


Outline

Introduction to Recruitment is the predecessor lecture.

  1. Career administration. The process or activity of running an enterprise, which objectives are (a) discovering somebody's vocation, (b) identifying somebody's target occupation, (c) locating somebody's target employment, (d) analysis of somebody's KSAs, (e) development of somebody's employment credentials, and (f) landing somebody's job in the target occupation.
    • Vocation. A strong feeling called "calling" of suitability for a particular career or occupation.
    • Occupation. A job, profession, and/or position that somebody works in.
  2. Employment credential. A qualification, achievement, personal quality, or aspect of a person's background used to indicate that this person is suitable for particular employment.
  3. Third-party credential.
  4. Professional credential.
  5. Academic credential.

Introduction to Careerprise is the successor lecture.

Materials

Recorded audio

Recorded video

Live sessions

Texts and graphics

See also