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Life on the Tilt-a-Whirl: Work and Change
Dr. William A. Borgen, UBC &Dr. Lee D. Butterfield, Adler School of
Professional Psychology
ASPECT ConferenceNovember 7, 2013
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Where it Began: The Experience of Unemployment
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Impact of Unemployment
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Output from the Studies of the Psychological Reactions to UnemploymentEnduring Message from Participants – People Don’t Know what It Is Like. You have to tell them…
Scholarly and Professional Articles
Development of a Training Program in Group Employment Counselling, implemented in Canada and five other countries
Creation of a Self-Help booklet – At the Controls: Charting a Course through Unemployment
ASPECT Conference November 7, 2013
Beginning in 2002 – Focus on Workers
• Combination of interests in career, human resource management, change/transition, and the CIT
• SSHRC-funded grant had 3 components:– Workplace wellness programs– Workers handling change well that affected their work
• Broad range of workers from 19 – 59 and from labourers to senior leadership positions
– Factors workers take into account when making career decisions
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Implications for Future Research• What is the process involved in moving from not doing well to
doing well?• How are those doing well appraising situations involving
change?• Are different groups of people using different strategies (older
workers, younger workers, new immigrants)?
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2005 SSHRC Research Project
• Critical Incident Technique: What helps or hinders workers’ ability to handle change well that affects their work?– Older workers– Younger workers– New immigrants
• Grounded Theory: What is the process that allows workers to move from not doing as well with change to doing well with change?
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SSHRC 2009 Research Project• Missing from the earlier studies were middle managers –
sandwiched between workers and executives, how do they do well with the changes they are experiencing that affect their work?
• Non-retiring workers aged 65 and older – who are they, what factors did they consider when deciding to continue working, what supports did they have, what would have helped them with their decision?
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Results of Ongoing Studies
• What factors helped and hindered workers deal well with changes affecting their work– 15 categories of helping, hindering, wish list items
• Largest helping category group = Support• Largest hindering categories = Management
Style/Work Environment/Sense of Competence– Suggests environment has an impact and needs to be
taken into account
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Helpful Hindering Wish List
Incidents/
ParticipantsPercent of
ParticipantsIncidents/
ParticipantsPercent of
ParticipantsItems/
ParticipantsPercent of
Participants
Personal Attitudes/Traits/Emotional set 190/62 53% 33//23 20% 3/2 2%Support From Friends and Family 82/52 45% 16/7 6% 12/9 8%
Internal Framework and Boundaries 106/50 43% 12/9 8% 3/3 3%
Support From Colleagues and Management 67/47 41% 31/19 16% 16/12 10%
Taking Action 77/40 34% 3/3 3% 7/5 4%
Self-care 78/34 29% 27/22 19% 21/14 12%
Education and Training 39/28 24% 23/18 16% 22/17 15%
Professional Support and Public Services 31/22 19% 3/3 3% 15/13 11%
Job Design and Employment Opportunity 84/26 22% 92/37 32% 53/30 26%
Experience and Skill/Role Competence 54/28 24% 51/35 30% 9/6 5%
Systems/Policies/Management Decisions 18/16 14% 96/35 30% 38/23 20%
Management 35/28 18% 84/26 22% 29/22 19%
Work Culture and Environment 28/21 18% 54/25 22% 12/11 9%
Personal Life Changes/Issues 12/11 9% 41/26 22% 23/17 15%
Support From Others 21/14 12% 18/15 13% 12/9 8%
Total Number of Incidents and Items/Participants
1,781/117
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What Workers Are Telling Us
• Participants in our studies over the past 10 years have told us that they are changing jobs and organizations throughout their careers– Career support is not just needed at the point of entry or because of
layoff or downsizing
• Organizations’ best workers are choosing to leave when interactions with managers/supervisors hinder their ability to do their best work
• Many who have not left are planning to leave as a result of unsatisfactory interactions with managers/supervisors
• Workers feel they want to “matter” to their managers and organizations
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Oscillation
•Lonely•Lost•Isolated•Grieving•Alone
•Anxious•Guilty•Exhausted•Falling apart•Stressed•Overwhelmed•Depressed•Doubting
•Uncertain•Used•Disengaged•Failing•Worried•Tired•Pressured
•Frustrated•Annoyed•Angry•Mad
•Dispirited•Devalued•Unimportant•Stuck•Frazzled•Struggling•Confused•Concerned
Discouraged Angry
Alienated Burned Out
EnthusiasticChallenged
CompetentEngaged•Excited
•Interested•Happy
•Motivated•Invigorated•Connected•Successful
•Comfortable•Creative•Reinvent oneself
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OUTCOMES FOR WORKERS
Adapted from Carver (1998, p.246)
Thriving
Resilient
Coping
Succumbing
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How Do These Results Compare with Your Experience?
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Moving Towards Doing Well and Staying There
The study used grounded theory methodology to focus on the process of moving from not doing well to doing well with change affecting work
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Demographics
• Number of Participants: 16• Gender: 6 Men and 10 Women• Age: 50 to 70• Country of Birth: Canada• Education: Some College to Doctorate• Household Income: $2,000 to over $200,000• Martial Status: Single, Married, Widowed, and Divorced• Wide Range of Occupations• Length of Time in Occupation - 2 months to 18 years• Length of Time with Company - 2 years to 25 years• Length of Time in Current Job - Under 6 months to 8 yearsASPECT Conference November 7, 2013
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Changes that Affected Their Work
• Personal
• Job
• Company
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What Does “Doing Well” Mean?
• Focus on the positive/opportunities• Work-life balance• Coping and adapting to the different dynamics
and demands without feeling bitter• Learning from the different experience• Managing stress/Sense of personal health• Maintaining personal contact with others in
your environment• Sense of wholeness/Sense of meaning• Sense of hope and acceptance• “Generous exploration into the future”• Emotionally skilled with dealing with the
change/ “not falling to pieces”• Remain optimistic/happy• Content with your situation/ Maintain peace of
mind• Not feeling afraid
• “Take on most challenges and be successful with them.”
• “Changing the environment …in a positive way”
• Receive positive performance feedback from others
• “Not allowing the change to take over and control not just my life but our lives, my family’s life…”
• How I feel/You know you are doing a good job at work
• You feel in control• Sense of satisfaction and encouragement and
persistence• Sense of humour/Stand upright and laugh• “rolling with the punches”
“I think coping well means maintaining a sense of personal health throughout this, a sense of balance, a sense of meaning and, being aware of when things are becoming overwhelming at an early stage and being intervening on my own behalf to address those issues.”
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Unexpected Findings
• Two overarching experiences of the change from not doing well to doing well – Major point of demarcation in moving from not doing well to doing
well• 4 Participants
– Ongoing cycles of challenges to doing well and regaining a sense of doing well
• 12 Participants
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Points of Demarcation
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Core Elements in Moving Toward Doing Well
Increased Self-Awareness“I think it was when I started to get better. And I started to realize that nothing matters as much as your health and being here and that I want to live a long life and I’ll do whatever it takes to get there.”
Increased Understanding• Current emotional state
“I had to be on the floor a few times before I learned how to land on my feet.”
• Core strength “You are who you are.”
• Skills “Learning those actual life skills - those problem solving skills really
helped me out. Because I didn’t have those.”
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Core Elements in Moving Toward Doing Well
• Personal Agency/Action: “I think the turning point was when I went to the meeting…and told
(them) that I would not be working with them anymore; that I would not be travelling anymore… I didn’t get any requests anymore because I was very clear about it.”
• Acceptance of Issues Beyond One’s Control: “I had to learn how to look at things differently and accept that
sometimes really awful things have happened to me and that it wasn’t my fault, it just happens. ”
Moving from being externally directed to be internally guided
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Ongoing Cycles of Challenges to Doing Well and Regaining a Sense of
Doing Well
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Tilt-A-Whirl: Losing and Regaining Equilibrium
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Challenges to Equilibrium
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Hindering Incident Categories
• Personal – This category identified sub-categories about the participants and/or their reaction to the change that hindered them to do well with change.
Sub-category Incidents Participation Rate
Uncomfortable Feelings & Concerns 9 44%
Limitations and Adaptations 9 25%
Reductions in Stress Management Practices
4 25%
Aging or Deteriorating Health and Capabilities
3 19%
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Hindering Incident Categories
• Social Needs and Concerns – This category identified sub-categories about the participants’ needs for social support and their concerns about the impact of the change on others.
Sub-category Incidents Participation Rate
Lack of Social Support 8 38%
Negative Impact on Others 2 12%
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Hindering Incident Categories
• Workplace Conditions – This category identified sub-categories about workplace conditions that hindered them to do well with change.
Sub-category Incidents Participation Rate
Ineffective Management or Leadership
7 44%
Challenging Working Conditions
8 25%
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Regaining Equilibrium
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Helpful Incident Categories
• Personal – This category identified sub-categories about the participants and/or what they controlled within their change experience that helped them do well with change.
Sub-category Incidents Participation Rate
Mind Set 29 81%
Attributes 23 69%
Stress Management Practices 24 62%
Taking Action 15 56%
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Helpful Incident Categories
• Workplace Experience – This category identified sub-categories related to the participants’ place of work that helped them do well with change.
Sub-category Incidents Participation Rate
Leaders 8 38%
Workplace People 10 38%
Job and Workplace Environment
6 31%
Communication 5 19%
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What Would Have Helped Regain Equilibrium
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Wish List Categories
• Workplace Management – This category identified sub-categories the participants wished they had in the workplace to do well with change.
Sub-category Incidents Participation Rate
Strategic Planning and Communication
5 31%
Compensation 4 25%
Space and Time 4 25%
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Doing Well With Change – Enduring Impressions• Point of demarcation may or may not occur – similar range of
responses as in Carver’s model.
• Ongoing need to regain equilibrium – therefore ongoing need to be aware of self in the situation and to continually make decisions regarding how to respond – Career Decisions
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The Context of Individual Career/Life Planning
SOCIETAL CONTEXT
FAMILY
SELF/IDENTITY
PERSONAL CAREER
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Context in Which Career Decisions are Being Made
Several factors influence choice of occupations or career paths, including individual attributes or traits, family perspectives, rapidly evolving cultural influences such as poverty, addiction, conflict, displacement and discrimination, along with internationalization and rapid change in labour market opportunities.
These factors are differentially important within and across cultural contexts.
Occupations of choice may not be accessible. Many tasks and processes related to occupations are unstable. People need the skills and attitudes required to successfully manage
rapid and unpredictable changes that characterize many occupations and career trajectories.
Career Development is an emerging professional activity.
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The Aim of Career ServicesIn the current context, career/vocational services are often about assisting people in being:
• more informed about career options; • more confident in their ability to engage in achieving
the career goals they have set; • more robust in meeting the challenges and
opportunities of future career/life transitions; • more able to seek and have available career help when
needed throughout their working lives; • and more skillful in accessing information that is up-
to-date to help them make career decisions.”
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The Missing Link…
The Perspective of People Making Career Decisions
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The Proposed Study
Understanding Workers' Career Decisions from their Perspective
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Research Questions:
1. How are workers from age-specific groups making decisions about their careers over time?
2. What has helped and hindered them in making these career decisions?
3. What might have helped workers to make their career decisions?
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Invitation to Participate
Assistance offered by ASPECT and CCCBET• Recruitment • Interviewing
The Opportunity• Training in the interviewing approach to be offered in
a one day pre-conference session at next year’s conference.
• Follow-up support for the duration of the project.
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Discussion and Questions…
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THANK [email protected]@adler.edu
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