Career Guidance
Career Guidance
Career Guidance
Indicators
The National Career Development Association has provided a list of
competencies and performance indicators that a professional career
counselor must possess. These professional competencies are the basis for
the training of professional career counselors and a basis for the evaluation
of their performance.
The NCDA Career Counselling Competencies are composed of 11 areas.
These 11 areas has its own performance indicators that a person must also
possess. The 11 competencies with their corresponding performance
indicators are as follows:
Career Development Theory
Theory base and knowledge considered essential for professionals
engaging in career counseling and development.
Demonstration of knowledge of:
Counseling theories and associated techniques.
Theories and models of career development.
Individual differences related to gender, sexual orientation,
race, ethnicity, and physical and mental capacities.
Theoretical models for career development and associated
counseling and information-delivery techniques and
resources.
Human growth and development throughout the life span.
Role relationships which facilitate life-work planning.
Information, techniques, and models related to career
planning and placement
Individual and Group Counseling Skills
Individual and group counseling competencies considered essential for
effective career counseling.
Demonstration of ability to:
Establish and maintain productive personal
relationships with individuals.
Establish and maintain a productive group climate.
Collaborate with clients in identifying personal goals.
Identify and select techniques appropriate to client or
group goals and client needs, psychological states,
and developmental tasks.
Identify and understand clients personal
characteristics related to career.
Identify and understand social contextual conditions
affecting clients careers.
1 | National Career Development Association
Individual/Group Assessment
Individual/group assessment skills considered essential for
professionals engaging in career counseling.
Demonstration of ability to:
Assess personal characteristics such as aptitude,
achievement, interests, values, and personality traits.
Assess leisure interests, learning style, life roles,
self-concept, career maturity, vocational identity,
career indecision, work environment preference
(e.g., work satisfaction), and other related life
style/development issues.
Assess conditions of the work environment (such
as tasks, expectations, norms, and qualities of the
physical and social settings).
Evaluate and select valid and reliable instruments
appropriate to the clients gender, sexual
orientation, race, ethnicity, and physical and
mental capacities.
2 | National Career Development Association
Information/Resources
Information/resource base and knowledge essential for professionals
engaging in career counseling.
Demonstration of knowledge of:
Education, training, and employment trends; labor
market information and resources that provide
information about job tasks, functions, salaries,
requirements and future outlooks related to broad
occupational fields and individual occupations.
Resources and skills that clients utilize in life-work
planning and management.
Community/professional resources available to
assist clients in career planning, including job
search.
Changing roles of women and men and the
implications that this has for education, family,
and leisure.
Methods of good use of computer-based career
information delivery systems (CIDS) and
computer-assisted career guidance systems
(CACGS) to assist with career planning.
Program Promotion, Management and Implementation
Skills necessary to develop, plan, implement, and manage
comprehensive career development programs in a variety of settings.
Demonstration of knowledge of:
Diverse Populations
Knowledge and skills considered essential in providing career
counseling and development processes to diverse populations.
Demonstration of ability to:
Identify development models and multicultural
counseling competencies.
Identify developmental needs unique to various
diverse populations, including those of different
gender, sexual orientation, ethnic group, race,
and physical or mental capacity.
Define career development programs to
accommodate needs unique to various diverse
populations.
Find appropriate methods or resources to
communicate with limited-English-proficient
individuals.
Identify alternative approaches to meet career
planning needs for individuals of various diverse
populations.
Identify community resources and establish
linkages to assist clients with specific needs.
Assist other staff members, professionals, and
community members in understanding the unique
needs/characteristics of diverse populations with
regard to career exploration, employment
expectations, and economic/social issues.
Advocate for the career development and
employment of diverse populations.
5 | National Career Development Association
Supervision
Knowledge and skills considered essential in critically evaluating
counselor performance, maintaining and improving professional skills, and
seeking assistance for others when needed in career counseling.
Demonstration of:
Ability to recognize own limitations as a career
counselor and to seek supervision or refer clients
when appropriate.
Ability to utilize supervision on a regular basis to
maintain and improve counselor skills.
Ability to consult with supervisors and colleagues
regarding client and counseling issues and issues
related to ones own professional development as
a career counselor.
Knowledge of supervision models and theories.
Ability to provide effective supervision to career
counselors and career development facilitators at
different levels of experience.
Ability to provide effective supervision to career
development facilitators at different levels of
experience by:
o knowledge of their roles,
competencies, and ethical standards
o determining their competence in each
of the areas included in their
certification
o further training them in competencies,
including interpretation of assessment
instruments
o monitoring and mentoring their
activities in support of the
professional career counselor; and
scheduling regular consultations for
the purpose of reviewing their
activities
Ethical/Legal Issues
Information base and knowledge essential for the ethical and legal practice
of career counseling.
6 | National Career Development Association
Source: http://associationdatabase.com/aws/NCDA/pt/sp/about