Holland Codes Essays

  • Holland Code Essay

    1160 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Holland Codes/Holland Occupational themes/ RIASEC test is, is a theory created by psychologist John Holland of careers and vocational choice based upon personality types. He believed that “personalities seek out and flourish in career environments they fit and that jobs and career environments are classifiable by the personalities that flourish in them." Even with questions of reliability and validity, Holland believed that all people could be categorized as six types. The types included Realistic

  • An Analysis of the Two Founders of Career Therapy, John L Holland and Donald E. Super

    621 Words  | 2 Pages

    critically compare and contrast the two founders of Career Therapy, John L. Holland and Donald E. Super. Both these theorists spent a life time dedicated to refining helpful tools for use in making vocational choices. Mark Savickas a protégé of Super talks about how both these amazing theorists have influenced his own Narrative approach. “ From Super I learned the importance of the developmental perspective. From Holland I learned that you are wasting your time if you are doing science that doesn’t

  • Career Counseling Over the Lifespan

    3630 Words  | 8 Pages

    Savickas, M L. (1994, Sep). Donald Edwin Super: the career of a planful explorer The Career Development Quarterly. Alexandria: Vol. 43(1), 4-26. Weinrach, S. G. (1996). The phychological and vocational interest patterns of Donald Super and John Holland. Journal of Counseling and Development : JCD, 75(1), 5-16. doi: 10560445.

  • The Holland Code And Career Goals

    906 Words  | 2 Pages

    A career goal of mine would be to make it in the history field after completing my studies in my college year. Three assessments that correlate to my goal are the Holland Code/ Career Autobiography, Time Management, and Academic Plan. The Holland Code/ Career Autobiography showed me as being artistic, investigative, and realistic. My artistic interest mean I seek creativity in my work without rules interfering with the process. My investigative side relates the searching of information and identifying

  • Career Development and Gender, Race, and Class

    2250 Words  | 5 Pages

    gender, race, and class. Trait and Factor Theories. The basis of trait and factor theories is the assumption that there are unique traits that can be reliably measured and that it is possible to match individual traits to occupational requirements. Holland identified six types of occupations theorized that people seek work environments and occupations that match their preferred traits. However, some people question the accuracy of the instruments used to measure... ... middle of paper ... ...h:

  • The Holland Codes System (RIASEC) Test

    750 Words  | 2 Pages

    Career Goals I chose the Holland code (RIASEC) Test to take for my career assessment. According to "Open Source Psychometrics Project" (n.d.), "The Holland Codes system breaks down occupations into six general categories…A Holland Code summarizes your results with an acronym for the categories you score highest for, which makes you an ICS”. I scored the highest with investigative. My next highest scores were even- which were social and conventional. The lowest scores were for artistic, realistic

  • Napoleon and Caesar

    1843 Words  | 4 Pages

    strategies (Duggan 117). Julius Caesar was to become one of the greatest generals, conquering the whole of Gaul. In 58 BC, Caesar became governor and military commander of Gaul, which included modern France, Belgium, and portions of Switzerland, Holland, and Germany west of the Rhine. For the next eight years, Caesar led military campaigns involving both the Roman legions and tribes in Gaul who were often competing among themselves. Julius Caesar was a Roman general and statesman whose dictatorship

  • Louis XIV: Absolute Monarchist

    848 Words  | 2 Pages

    Louis XIV’s absolute government was beneficial to the development of his country. By restructuring France’s laws into one standard legal code Louis gained public support, by showing that he was a fair leader. “The Code”, as Louis labeled it, was applicable to everyone (except Louis, of course), and universalized laws across France. The power to enforce “The Code” was taken away from lords and nobles, and instead given to “Intendants”, upper-middle class men appointed by Louis. These intendants, having

  • The Doctrines of Kurt Vonnegut

    1418 Words  | 3 Pages

    Vonnegut coincides with his sentiments appertaining to human substantiality, altruistic love, and Post-existentialism. A primary interrogation Vonnegut predominately accentuates is the meaning of human existence; "What is the purpose of life?" (Holland 54) Man must feel that he is "serving some purpose," that his life has substance and significance (55). To find an answer to this question, Vonnegut unwinds into the pages of his works, man's search for substantiality, and his attempt at changing

  • World War One and Its Aftermath

    10812 Words  | 22 Pages

    British weren't believed to participate in the war and therefore weren't thought of when making the plan * The plan depended on speed and surprise - using railways, which involved an attack through the countries of Holland and Belgium. * This attack through Belgium and Holland surprised the French, who believed if and attack came from the Germans it would be fought at Alsace on the frano-german border, not to the north of their country The French Plan - Plan 17 in 1913 ---------------------------------

  • The Most Important Leader of German Humanitism

    4418 Words  | 9 Pages

    The most brilliant and most important leader of German humanism, b. at Rotterdam, Holland, 28 October, probably in 1466; d. at Basle, Switzerland, 12 July, 1536. He was the illegitimate child of Gerard, a citizen of Gouda, and Margaretha Rogers, and at a later date latinized his name as Desiderius Erasmus. Eventually his father became

  • Outline of Operation Market Garden

    1059 Words  | 3 Pages

    biggest airborne operation in our history. Montgomery's Operation Market-Garden consisted of two parts. The Market part of Montgomery's operation was to lay a carpet with the First Allied Airborne Army to seize seven canal and river bridges in Holland as well as the very important bridge, in terms of supply across the lower Rhine at town of Arnhem . The Garden part of the operation was to have, the British Armoured Corps rapidly moving 60 miles along the narrow corridor crossing & securing the

  • Hooligans

    4121 Words  | 9 Pages

    Their main interest does not seem much to see brilliant football but to see their team win. As I mentioned in the beginning football hooliganism is known as the ‘English Disease’ but it has been a problem throughout Europe especially in Germany, Holland, Italy and Belgium as well as in the UK. Also Greece, Czech Republic, Denmark, Austria and Turkey witnessed these disturbances in football matches. There are a lot of work done all around the world to avoid the harm hooligans give to the environment

  • Anne Frank Remembered: Review

    1119 Words  | 3 Pages

    Review Anne Frank Remembered is the autobiography of Miep Gies, the woman who helped the Frank family survive during their two years in hiding. Her book is a primary source or first hand account of the persecution of Jewish people in Nazi occupied Holland during the second world war. It is also the first hand account of the hiding of Jews such as the Frank family, the Van Daan family, and Dr. Albert Dussel during this time. In regard to the book's autobiographical format, the author, Miep Gies, does

  • Charles de Secondat, Baron De La Brede Et De Montesquieu

    1093 Words  | 3 Pages

    Montesquieu, with the help of his Parisian connections he got elected to the French Academy, he was happy to sell his office of president a mortier. In the course of the next three years he traveled all over Europe, visiting Germany, Hungary, England, Holland, Austria, and Italy. It is not surprising that out of his European tour the country which had the greatest impact on his later work (just like it did on Voltaire's) was England. During his stay there he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society

  • Anne Frank

    1400 Words  | 3 Pages

    and her sister had a busy and happy life, they quickly learned Dutch, attended school, and made many new friends. In May 1940 the Nazis got Holland and soon began to place limits on the economic and social freedom the citizens. In the movie we saw how Jews had to register with the authorities so the Germans knew the names and addresses of every Jew in Holland. Jewish children were forced to attend only Jewish schools. Everybody must had cards. Those issued to the Jews were stamped with a "J" and they

  • Comparison of Seven Beowulf Translations

    1132 Words  | 3 Pages

    be able to judge each of the two things, words and works” (Donaldson 6). Kevin Crossley-Holland: “one whose mind is ... ... middle of paper ... ... multiple synonyms, vague references, etc. BIBLIOGRAPHY Alexander, Michael. Beowulf A Verse Translation. New York: Penguin Books, 1973. Chickering, Howell D. Beowulf A dual-Language Edition. New York: Anchor Books, 1977. Crossley-Holland, Kevin, trans. Beowulf The Fight at Finnsburh, edited by Heather O’Donoghue. New York: Oxford

  • Free Essays - Anne Frank

    866 Words  | 2 Pages

    was an average business man, Mrs. Frank was an average mother and Margot and Anne were average students. The one thing that made them different in the eyes of Hitler, was the fact that they were Jewish. Once Hitler rose to power, the Franks fled to Holland, where the hoped to be safe from the Jewish-blood thirsty Nazis, they went on with their normal lives, until once again Hitler took over. This caused the Franks to flee again, only this time they would be in hiding. A plan was devised; the Franks

  • Ruisdael Vs. Monet

    1524 Words  | 4 Pages

    the walls, while intricately carved panels hold the grand window directly across from the door. Rich in color, the walls make one feel very comfortable in this intimate surrounding. The feel of the wood almost brings the viewer back to 17th century Holland. Reflecting off the V-shaped wood paneled floor, light flows through the window, illuminating the Dutch landscapes. A simple wooden throne sits against one wall, and a short dresser rests along the opposite wall. Instead of being labeled directly

  • The Life Of Anne Frank

    641 Words  | 2 Pages

    many Jewish friends and acquaintances are being taken away in droves. The Gestapo is treatiang them very roughly and transporting them in cattle cars to Westerbork, the big camp in Drenthe to which they're sending all the Jews....If it's that bad in Holland, what must it be like in those faraway and uncivilized places where the Germans are sending them? We assume that most of them are being murdered. The English radio says they're being gassed."-- October 9, 1942 On Her Old Country, Germany "Fine specimens