Career Guidance Can Save You Time and Energy
We all want to excel in our career, whatever field it may be. Since childhood, we have dreamt and aspired for a prosperous future. But how do we make these dreams a reality?
The question of what we want to be when we grow up seems so simple when we are children. Five-year-olds, taught by their parents to answer, easily answer this question with careers typically considered as successful – a doctor, an engineer, a businessman, or a lawyer. But as we go through the various levels of schooling, the options increase. The variety of choices are more so widening with the advent of technology. New job opportunities have cropped up involving the Internet and even in the field of science with new advances in research.
Thus, career guidance is increasingly becoming more popular and important for many students and fresh graduates or those already working. You or your parents may employ professional career counsellors. Though an additional expense, you will find that this will be worth it in the long run.
Many enter middle school or college hastily choosing courses to take. For most, choosing a career starts only when they start taking major courses. Hence, they have already spent money and hours of going to classes that may not even be helpful in the career they eventually decide to take. Others go to school and then take whatever available job there is. After a while, they find out that they are not happy or satisfied in their profession and they start to make a career change. Sometimes, it is already too late – they are already too old or they can no longer sacrifice losing their current job to start a new career path.
Career guidance can save us from this unnecessary confusion and misery. Through career guidance, we can better assess our strengths, skills, and interests. We can plan our career path instead of simply going at what job sounds pleasing when we are still in school. Everything we do in school can then be focused on a single career. Career guidance will be more beneficial if it starts earlier in our life, as early as middle school.
Do not fret if you hope to have career guidance but do not have the resources. In high school, we could receive initial advice from guidance counsellors and career tests. There are also a lot of career guidance websites and articles on the Internet that you could avail for free. All you need to do is spend some extra time to research, read, and make your own plan. In the end, it will be a lot of time and energy saved through career guidance.