Young Australians Navigating the ‘Careers Information Ecology’

Author:

Roberts Steven1ORCID,Lyall Ben12,Trott Verity2,Foeken Elsie1,Smith Jonathan3,Robards Brady2,Genat Anna4,Graf Darren2,Jones Callum1ORCID,Marple Patrick2,Waite Catherine1,Wright Breanna4

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Education, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC 3800, Australia

2. Faculty of Arts, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC 3800, Australia

3. Office of the Vice-Chancellor, Australian Catholic University, Brisbane, QLD 4014, Australia

4. Behaviour Works, Monash Sustainability and Development Institute, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC 3800, Australia

Abstract

The policy orientations of advanced neoliberal democracies situate young people as rational actors who are responsible for their own career outcomes. While career scholars have been critical of how this routinely ignores the unequal effects of structural constraints on personal agency, they have long suggested that young people should have access to the best available ‘roadmaps’ and advice to navigate the uncertainties baked into the contemporary economic landscape. Complementing the significant attention that is given to the (potentially emancipatory) experience of formal careers guidance, we present findings from a multi-method study. We explore young Australians’ (aged 15–24) navigation of careers information through a nationally representative survey (n = 1103), focus groups with 90 participants and an analysis of 15,227 social media comments. We suggest that the variety of formal and informal sources pursued and accessed by young people forms a relational ‘ecology’. This relationality is twofold. First, information is often sequential, and engagements with one source can inform the experience or pursuit of another. Second, navigation of the ecology is marked by a high level of intersubjectivity through interpersonal support networks including peers, family and formal service provision. These insights trouble a widespread, but perhaps simplistic, reading of young people having largely internalised a neoliberal sensibility of ‘entrepreneurial selfhood’ in their active pursuit of a range of career advice. Throughout our analysis, we attend to the ways that engagement in the career information ecology is shaped by social inequalities, further underscoring challenges facing careers guidance and social justice goals.

Funder

Australian Government Department for Education, Skills and Employment

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference72 articles.

1. France, A. (2007). Understanding Youth in Late Modernity, Open University Press. [1st ed.].

2. Ensuring Quality in Career Guidance: A Critical Review;Hooley;Br. J. Guid. Couns.,2019

3. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) (2004). Career Guidance and Public Policy: Bridging the Gap, OECD. Available online: https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/education/career-guidance-and-public-policy_9789264105669-en.

4. Building a Radical Career Imaginary: Using Laclau and Mouffe and Hardt and Negri to Reflexively Re-Read Ali and Graham’s Counselling Approach to Career Guidance;Hooley;Br. J. Guid. Couns.,2022

5. On Epistemic Justice in Career Guidance;Bengtsson;Br. J. Guid. Couns.,2022

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