Young Adult Development at the School-to-Work Transition

School-to-work (STW) pathways and transitions are key developmental processes in young adulthood. During this time, young adults face multiple choices and challenges. Young Adult Development at the School-to-Work Transition describes pathways for students to successfully transition to the work environment. The book examines social, economic, cultural, familial, contextual, and personal factors that shape the processes involved in the school-to-work transition. Internationally renowned scholars in the fields of developmental psychology, applied psychology, counseling, and sociology have contributed chapters focusing on theory, research, and application related to school-to-work and educational transitions. The book also gives attention to groups who have particular transition needs, including young adults with disabilities and special needs, cultural minorities, international students, and migrants.

2000 ◽  
Vol 59 (4) ◽  
pp. 240-255 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthias Reitzle ◽  
Rainer K. Silbereisen

The school-to-work transition has become more and more individualized over the last decades in the Federal Republic of Germany as in other Western industrialized countries. As compared to the 1950s and 1960s, the current educational system in Germany offers a greater variety of school tracks, apprenticeships, and training programs and provides a greater permeability between schools and programs. German unification offers a unique opportunity to study the influence of social and economic change on the individualization of the school-to-work transition, because change processes, resembling those over the last decades in the West, have been going on in the East in a time-lapse camera fashion. Using retrospective data on transitions gathered from Eastern and Western young adults from vocationally-oriented school tracks in 1991 (representing pre-unification conditions) and 1996, three different studies on the timing of key events in the school-to-work transition are presented. In the first study, aimed at the prediction of interindividual timing variability in transitions, the ages upon completion of training and financial self-support in the East were determined by structural factors such as the age at completion of school which, in turn, could only be predicted by the age at entry into elementary school. In contrast, age variability in the West was also influenced by person and family background variables. In the second study, it could be demonstrated that age variability with regard to completion of school and achievement of financial self-support had markedly increased among younger cohorts of Easterners assessed in 1996 reflecting an increased variety of educational opportunities and labor market obstacles on the pathway to employment. In the third study, two factors, namely prolonged education and unemployment as reflections of institutional and economic change in the East were identified which partly explained the increase in the average age at which Eastern young adults achieved financial independence. All three studies aimed at building a link between properties of the institutional and economic macro-contexts and the ages at key transitions into employment representing comprehensive chronological outcomes. Between these poles, however, there are a multitude of transitional pathways and patterns as well as personality and family factors operating on these patterns. A further inquiry into these psychological factors and mechanisms is a valuable research goal for the future.


Author(s):  
Jos Akkermans ◽  
Rowena Blokker ◽  
Corine Buers ◽  
Beatrice Van der Heijden ◽  
Ans De Vos

One key career transition during emerging adulthood is the school-to-work transition. As careers have become much more dynamic and complex, this particular has also become more challenging for young adults. In this chapter, the authors explain how the school-to-work transition has changed and how individual agency and structural factors can interact to lay an early foundation for sustainable career development. In line with this, the authors argue that career competencies and employability are crucial concepts for today’s school-to-work transition. Finally, they look forward to how future research might contribute to further understanding the contemporary school-to-work transition. In all, this chapter argues that an adaptive school-to-work transition is crucial as a building block for long-term sustainability of careers.


2002 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 139-157 ◽  
Author(s):  
ANDREA M. HUSSONG ◽  
LAURIE CHASSIN

Although they have received little empirical attention, departures from the parental home play a significant role in demarcating the transition from adolescence to young adulthood. The current study examined the extent to which various features of young adults' experiences of leaving home differed for children of alcoholic (COAs) versus nonalcoholic parents, what adolescent precursors might account for noted differences and what indicators of young adult adjustment are related to the leaving home experience. A total of 227 young adults drawn from a high-risk, community sample of COAs and matched controls were interviewed at ages 18–23 years regarding their prior leaving home experiences. COAs showed greater difficulties in negotiating this transition, fewer positive feelings about the transition, and different reasons for leaving home as compared to participants without an alcoholic parent. Moreover, adolescent risk behaviors, family conflict, and family disorganization (assessed prior to this transition) each partly accounted for COAs' risk for difficulty in the leaving home transition. Although certain aspects of the leaving home transition were uniquely related to young adult adjustment, future research is still needed to more comprehensively understand the implications for young adult development associated with such individual differences in the leaving home transition.


Author(s):  
Rachel King ◽  
Chelsea Arsenault ◽  
Denise Larsen

This chapter on supporting the school-to-work transition for young adults formerly in care provides hope-informed interventions for increasing resilience for youth who have aged out of government care. Because these youth face unique challenges, success in the school-to-work transition can constitute a resilient outcome. This chapter discusses the particular barriers faced by young adults formerly in care as well as summarizing the literature on how helping professionals can best intervene. Specifically, the authors look at hope theory and how it can provide a practical and effective framework for intervening in the face of uncertain outcomes to promote resilience and flourishing. They then outline specific interventions as informed by research and best practice.


2014 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 100-113
Author(s):  
Roxanna N. Pebdani

This study of young adults with disabilities in transition explored what factors contributed to young adults with disabilities terminating early from a transition program. Data from 6,227 young adults with disabilities aged 17–22 living in one of eight major metropolitan areas in the United States were utilised (58.7% of the sample were male, 63.1% were African-American, and 71.4% had a learning disability). All participants were enrolled in a school-to-work transition programme in which service providers place students into paid internships. Service providers at the eight sites collected data while working with participants, and then collected follow-up data at three and twelve months post-programme completion or termination. Hierarchical Linear Modelling was used to explore how personal factors impacted early termination, while controlling for variation at the site level. Results showed the three main reasons for early termination from work to be: programme initiated termination, interpersonal conflicts with coworkers or supervisors and transportation issues. Additionally, the multilevel model that controlled for variance at the site level demonstrated that Asian-American young adults with disabilities were less likely to terminate early from work. These results can help individuals who work with young adults with disabilities, provide supplemental services to students who may need additional assistance to succeed in a transition programme.


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