Difference between revisions of "Book of Careers"

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#*[[Professional recommendation]]. A suggestion or proposal to hire somebody because of his or her professional capacity. Usually, [[professional recommendation]]s include testimonies of the recommended person's achievements.
 
#*[[Professional recommendation]]. A suggestion or proposal to hire somebody because of his or her professional capacity. Usually, [[professional recommendation]]s include testimonies of the recommended person's achievements.
 
#*[[Professional association membership]]. Membership in a professional association.
 
#*[[Professional association membership]]. Membership in a professional association.
#'''[[Academic credential]]'''.  
+
#'''[[Academic credential]]''' ([[educational credential]]). A [[credential]] that is issued by an educational institution or test provider to certify specific academic achievements traditionally related to someone's knowledge.  
#*[[High school diploma]].
+
#*[[High school diploma]]. An [[academic credential]] that certifies that someone has been graduated from a high school.  
#*[[GED]].
+
#*[[GED]] ([[General Equivalency Diploma]]). A credential that certifies that someone has successfully passed the test that covers United States or Canadian high school-level academic skills.
#*[[College diploma]].
+
#*[[Diploma]]. A certificate or deed issued by an educational institution, such as college or university, that testifies that the recipient has successfully completed a particular course of study.  
 
#*[[Associate's degree]].  
 
#*[[Associate's degree]].  
 
#*[[Bachelor's degree]].  
 
#*[[Bachelor's degree]].  

Revision as of 20:17, 12 June 2018

Introduction to Career Administration (hereinafter, the Lecture) is a lecture introducing the learners to career administration and related topics. 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. (1) A qualification, achievement, personal quality, or aspect of a person's background used to indicate that this person is suitable for particular employment; (2) A document that ascertains that qualification, achievement, personal quality, or aspect.
  3. Third-party credential. A credential issued by a third party.
    • Employment authorization. A government authorization of someone's eligibility to be employed. An employment authorization document is usually called a work permit.
    • Driving record. A motor vehicle operator report that is kept by the motor vehicle authority and usually contains information about one's driver license and traffic violations.
    • Criminal record. A list of a person's previous criminal convictions and, sometimes, pending charges.
    • Security clearance. In the United States of America, an official determination that an individual may access information classified by the United States Government. Security clearances are hierarchical; each level grants the holder access to information in that level and the levels below it.
    • Drug test. A technical analysis of a biological specimen, for example urine, hair, blood, breath, sweat, and/or oral fluid/saliva used to determine the presence or absence of specified parent drugs or their metabolites.
  4. Professional credential. An employment credential that specifically refers to one's professional capacity.
  5. Academic credential (educational credential). A credential that is issued by an educational institution or test provider to certify specific academic achievements traditionally related to someone's knowledge.

Introduction to Careerprise is the successor lecture.

Materials

Recorded audio

Recorded video

Live sessions

Texts and graphics

See also