Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-r6qrq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T21:08:31.279Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Social Practice of a Career Guidance Project Based on the Wisdom of the Classic of Changes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2015

Shu-Hui Liu*
Affiliation:
Department of Guidance & Counseling cum Chinese Career Research Center, National Changhua University of Education, Changhua, Taiwan
Yi-Jen Lu
Affiliation:
Tainan Municipal Fusing Junior High School, Tainan, Taiwan
Chi-Ping Deng
Affiliation:
Department of Guidance & Counseling cum Chinese Career Research Center, National Changhua University of Education, Changhua, Taiwan
Chih-Hung Wang
Affiliation:
Department of Guidance & Counseling cum Chinese Career Research Center, National Changhua University of Education, Changhua, Taiwan
Foo Bee Keh
Affiliation:
Department of Guidance and Counseling cum Counseling Center, New Era College, Kajang, Malaysia
Ya-Chi Tsai
Affiliation:
Mental Health Research and Education Center, Shanghai Ocean University, Shanghai, China
*
Address for correspondence: Shu-Hui Liu, Department of Guidance & Counseling cum Chinese Career Research Center, National Changhua University of Education 1 Jin-De Road, Changhua City, Changhua County, 50058Taiwan. Email: gushliu@cc.ncue.edu.tw

Abstract

The Virtue Existential Career Model (VEC) is a Chinese career development model based on the Classic of Changes. It is designed to supplement the person-environment fit paradigm of Taiwan's 12-Year Basic Education for junior high school students. We adopted an action research approach with two parts, reflection-on-action and critical-emancipatory. An easy-to-use VEC career curriculum and a career information system (Career Genesis; CG) were developed by a team of staff members from government agencies (Tainan Department of Education and Student Counseling Centers), junior high schools, and the Chinese Career Research Center of National Changhua University of Education, Taiwan. The outcome of this project was strong on fostering interconnectedness. Implementing our VEC curriculum and CG to 30 junior high school students received statistically significant immediate increases in resilience, adaptation, and liking of career decision. The feedback and reflections suggest that mandating, attracting, and simplifying are useful strategies to promote our VEC model as well as to facilitate social change and create a multiple-win situation for all parties involved. This approach also follows the tao (道) of the Classic of Changes to provide new knowledge.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2015 

Taiwan has been transforming into a knowledge-based economy (also known as knowledge economy, frequently discussed with issues of informationalism, information revolution, knowledge sharing, knowledge management, intellectual capitalism; Al-Hawamdeh, Reference Al-Hawamdeh2005; Chen & Chiu, Reference Chen and Chiu2005; Hu, Lin, & Chang, Reference Hu, Lin and Chang2005; Shie & Meer, Reference Shie and Meer2010; So, Reference So2005). The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) defines a knowledge-based economy as ‘economies which are directly based on the production, distribution and use of knowledge and information’ (OECD, 2005). Many national standards for higher education or employability in various countries (Commonwealth of Australia, 2002; Council for the Advancement of Standards in Higher Education, 2009; OECD, 2005; Partnership for 21st Century Skills, 2008) have pointed out the importance of how learning to learn, lifelong learning, using information and communications technology, managing information, acquiring and using knowledge, solving problems, resolving conflicts, and innovating have become common occupational capacities at all levels and in all lines of work. In sum, workers need to acquire, utilise, and innovate upon their knowledge creatively.

Aligned with the international trend of educational reform emerging in the era of knowledge-based economies, Taiwan has gone through educational reform during the past decades (I-ru, Reference I-ru2012; Lin, Reference Lin2004). In 2014, Taiwan's Ministry of Education (TMOE) implemented its second education reform, the 12-Year Basic Education (十二年國教), following the mandatory education requirement of 9 years, which began in 1968. The new reform is meant to encourage junior high school students to explore their abilities and interests before making their educational and career decisions for the 10th grade. With this agenda, career guidance, a subset of general education in junior high school, becomes a focus. Junior high schools are asked to promote career guidance courses and apprenticeships, and to embed career elements into regular courses so that students can explore their career development and be exposed to sufficient career information.

We observed two problems in TMOE's career guidance practice in junior high schools. The first problem was the incompleteness of its adaptation of the person-environment (P-E) fit paradigm (Spokane, Meir, & Catalano, Reference Spokane, Meir and Catalano2000; Tinsley, Reference Tinsley2000; Tracey, Darcy & Kovalski, Reference Tracey, Darcy and Kovalski2000) to the current knowledge-based economy. The second results from what Chinese call the superiors can make policies and the subordinates always have strategies to circumvent them (abbreviated as making policies vs. circumventing policies, 上有政策, 下有對策). That is, guidance teachers in junior high schools were busy doing paperwork instead of professional work to accomplish the underlying missions of the TMOE's requirements.

To solve these problems, the Chinese Career Research Center of National Changhua University of Education (or NCUE) in Taiwan proposed a VEC curriculum and Career Genesis (CG), both based on the Virtue Existential Career (VEC) model (德性存在生涯模式; Liu, S., Hung, Huang, Wang, & Peng, Reference Liu, Hung, Huang, Wang and Peng2015; Liu, S., & Wang, Reference Liu, Chen, Lu, Lu and Ching2014; Liu, S., Chen, Lu, Lu, & Ching, Reference Liu, Chen, Lu, Lu and Ching2014). This approach echoed Hwang's (Reference Hwang2005, Reference Hwang2012) advocacy for culture-inclusive psychology as well as Liu, Ng, Gastardo-Conaco, and Wong's (Reference Liu, Ng, Gastardo-Conaco and Wong2008) proposition for social and cross-cultural psychology as a global enterprise. Confucian philosophy is considered to be a world philosophy that is rooted in the universal humanity and appeals to the whole of humanity (Cheng, Reference Cheng2013; Hwang, Reference Hwang2009; Liu, J. Reference Liu2014). We used it to address ordinary people's practical and existential career concerns.

The purpose of this action research was to complement the TMOE's fit model with the VEC model. This article presents our application of the VEC model to Taiwan's career guidance practice in junior high schools. It consists of the following: (1) our problem awareness concerning Taiwan's career guidance practice in junior high schools; (2) our VEC model and its application for junior high school students; (3) our research methods in terms of epistemological concerns, participants, project tasks, and evaluations; (4) our sequential research action and its action strategies and outcome analyses; and (5) the future vision of living up to the Tao (道).

Problem Awareness

Can the P-E Fit Paradigm Address the Career Development Requirements of a Knowledge-Based Economy?

The knowledge-based economy trend has added complexity to occupational structures and an individual's career development (Amundson, Parker, & Arthur, Reference Amundson, Parker and Arthur2002; Borgen, Reference Borgen1999; Kanter, Reference Kanter1999a, Reference Kanter1999b, Reference Kanter2003; Savickas, Reference Savickas, Collin and Young2000). Empirical evidence supports the idea that career development has gradually shifted from a traditional linear pattern to a boundaryless/protean one (Bussolari & Goodell, Reference Bussolari and Goodell2009; Forrier, Sels, & Stynen, Reference Forrier, Sels and Stynen2009; Harrison, Reference Harrison2006; Stoltz, Wolff, Monroe, Mazahreh, & Farris, Reference Stoltz, Wolff, Monroe, Mazahreh and Farris2013). Career development has been reframed as a process of choosing an educational or occupational option for identity investments (Wijers & Meijers, Reference Wijers and Meijers1996), within which recognising risks and appreciating change has become somewhat necessary (Adams, Reference Adams2006; Pryor & Bright, Reference Pryor and Bright2003).

The 12-Year Basic Education policy holds on to the rational P-E fit paradigm proposed by Parsons (Reference Parsons1909). Its mandatory practices of career tests, occupation site visits, and the Career Record Booklet (nicknamed as The Blue Booklet because of its blue cover) deliver the message that the main tasks of career development are to (through rational analysis) find the career paths that match the measured abilities and interests of students, and for these students to make and implement career plans accordingly.

There may be two challenges when incorporating the Western individual-orientated P-E fit of career paradigm into Taiwanese junior high students’ career development. First, Confucian cultureFootnote 1 in Taiwan places emphasis on academic achievement and glorifying family through occupation. Parents expect their children to enrol in prestigious schools: ‘the glory of the individual’ implies ‘the glory of the family’ (Hwang, Reference Hwang2012; Qi, Reference Qi2014). Although such a norm of mutual identification also applies to Western families, studies have illustrated that parental influence in shaping the career decision of their posterity is more powerful in Eastern societies (Iyengar & Lepper, Reference Iyengar and Lepper1999; Tang, Reference Tang2002). Therefore, in Confucian culture it is an important ability to integrate concerns of family into an individual's career (Liu, J., McMahon, & Watson, Reference Liu, McMahon and Watson2015; Mau, Reference Mau2004) and manage family intrusiveness while making one's decisions (Fan, Cheung, Leong, & Cheung, Reference Fan, Cheung, Leong and Cheung2014; Liu, J. et al., Reference Liu, McMahon and Watson2015; Ma & Yeh, Reference Ma and Yeh2005; Pekerti, Reference Pekerti2008). According to the theory of motivated information management, children in a Confucian culture have to assess the costs and benefits associated with information seeking (outcome assessments) and their ability to enact a particular strategy (efficacy assessments) before they take action to manage career uncertainty and related anxiety (Afifi, Dillow, & Morse, Reference Afifi, Dillow and Morse2004; Chang, Reference Chang2014). This is because it is normal for parents to expect to have a say in the consequences of such information seeking.

Second, the P-E fit paradigm rests upon the stability and predictability of both a person's traits and the world of work (Holland, Reference Holland1997; Super, Reference Super1957); yet, occupation structures and demands are full of rapid change in the era of knowledge-based economies (Miller, Reference Miller1995; Trevor-Roberts, Reference Trevor-Roberts2006). The work environment nowadays is volatile and defies prediction, which is a basis of the P-E fit paradigm (Lynch, Reference Lynch2000; Savickas, Reference Savickas, Collin and Young2000).

In sum, the ‘modernist’ approach attempts to use rational strategies to make a choice and execute a corresponding plan to pursue a P-E fit. This may help individuals to handle the stable aspects of career development (Spokane et al., Reference Spokane, Meir and Catalano2000; Tinsley, Reference Tinsley2000; Tracey et al., Reference Tracey, Darcy and Kovalski2000). However, individuals need new career views to cope with change and the uncertainty aspects of career development as well (Delia Rocca & Kostanski, Reference Delia Rocca and Kostanski2001; Herr, Reference Herr1999; Herr, Cramer, & Niles, Reference Herr, Cramer and Niles2004). In line with this thought, Gelatt (positive uncertainty; Gelatt, Reference Gelatt1989, Reference Gelatt1995), Cochran (narrative approach career counseling; Cochran, Reference Cochran1997), Krumboltz (planned happenstance theory; Mitchell et al., Reference Mitchell, Levin and Krumboltz1999; Krumboltz, Reference Krumboltz1998a, Reference Krumboltz1998b), Pryor and Bright (career chaos theory; Pryor & Bright, Reference Pryor and Bright2003, Reference Pryor and Bright2005, Reference Pryor and Bright2006, Reference Pryor and Bright2007), and Valach & Young (contextual action theory; Valach & Young, Reference Valach and Young2004) have proposed postmodern approaches to career development. They advocate open-minded and creative strategies to appreciate and adapt to change and uncertainty in the surroundings, so that individuals can extend themselves to try on possible selves and jobs. To combine these two approaches, we have provided an alternative career curriculum based on our VEC model.

How Can Career Guidance Become Professional and Beneficial Instead of Being a Documentation of Career Activities?

To enhance students’ career exploration and decision-making capacities, the TMOE requires schools to provide career tests and occupational site visits. The schools are also mandated to facilitate students to document all their career-related activities in The Blue Booklet. However, this has created a superficial focus for students to complete the booklet to gain credits for applying for enrolment in high schools, and for school administrations to continue to receive resources or avoid punishment from the local Ministry of Education (ME).

This phenomenon of superficial documentation resulted from making policies versus circumventing policies. That is to say, the subordinates mainly focus on providing superficial attention to pass the criteria of policies, but neglect to achieve the real mission of the policies (Yu & Huang, 1991). This may be because the subordinates and the superiors lack common ground about the mission or do not have the time and effort required to achieve the mission; for example, to take into account Chinese parents’ influences on their children's career development, the TMOE requires students and their teachers and parents to indicate their opinions about students’ educational choices. With the purpose of encouraging students, teachers, and parents to have a discussion and come to an agreement, it was designed in such a way that those students who have a documented student-teacher-parent agreement in The Blue Booklet received 6 points when s/he applied for enrolment in a high school. It transpired that all students received the maximum 6 points, because the parents, teachers and students all colluded to arrive at a consensus about the latter's educational choices. This virtually nullifies the value of The Blue Booklet as a lynchpin for discussion.

The VEC Model and its Applications for Junior High School Students

The VEC ModelFootnote 2

The VEC model (Liu, S., et al., Reference Liu, Hung, Huang, Wang and Peng2015; Liu, S. et al., Reference Liu, Wang, Deng, Keh, Lu and Tsai2014; Liu, S., & Wang, Reference Liu and Wang2014) was established by the NCUE Chinese Career Research Center. This model reflects the ancient Chinese wisdom of the Classic of Changes (易經; also known as the I Ching or the Book of Changes, the Zhouyi or Zhou Changes, an ancient divination text and the oldest of the Chinese Classics). This Classic articulates a cosmological model of changes via the fluxions of the two essential elements of yin (陰) and yang (陽). Yin (literally, dark) represents receptivity and denotes the power of earth; yang (literally, light) represents creativity and denotes the power of heaven. The yin-yang fluxions show the relationships of mutual completion and enhancement (亦此亦彼), generation by opposition (相互轉化), and joint production (生生不息). These principles govern, create, and transform all things existing in between earth and heaven (Chen, Reference Chen2002; Cheng, Reference Cheng2009a; Fu, L., Reference Fu1981; Fu, P., Reference Fu2011; Huang, Reference Huang2003, Reference Huang2007; Liu, Y., Reference Liu2005; Nan, Reference Nan1991a, Reference Nan1991b). Such yin-yang fluxions entail a sustained and dialectical process as a temporally successive phenomenon with no linear theory of causality.

The Classic of Changes reveals in its opening passages the significance of harmony in the ceaseless yin-yang fluxions and transformation of things and situations: ‘The way of heaven/yang is transformation, so that each thing obtains its own genuine life and is maintained in great harmony (乾道變化, 各正性命, 保合太和; Nelson, Reference Nelson2011).’ Harmony is a philosophy defining the relations among the elements of the unity in diversity, a way of living and behaving that leads to modesty and flexibility, and a moral process starting from self-examination and reaching the Middle Way (中庸之道; Yao, Reference Yao2013). Being harmonious () is different from being identical (同). That is, the totality is composed of different parts, and true harmony includes apparent opposites within as part of an overall unity. Actually, inclusive opposites are the power and energy of the harmonising process in yin-yang philosophy. Through harmonising, elements are brought into a dialectic relationship in which they contradict and yet mutually supplement each other and are thereby constructed in a new relation to form a new unit (Cheng, Reference Cheng2009b; Shen, Reference Shen2003; Yao, Reference Yao2013).

Accordingly, career development is constituted of interacting elements, different yet related, opposing yet complementary to each other. Within such a philosophy, career development is considered as a process of becoming through a continuous and discontinuous interplay of preceding and consequent moments in time and human development. As continuous, it always keeps something from the preceding moment; as discontinuous, the novel moment has its own originality that cannot be reduced to the preceding moment. Such a career evolution process is different from the traditional linear pattern promoted by the rational P-E fit paradigm (Sheldon & Elliot, Reference Sheldon and Elliot1999; Spokane et al., Reference Spokane, Meir and Catalano2000; Tinsley, Reference Tinsley2000; Tracey et al., Reference Tracey, Darcy and Kovalski2000); rather, it is closer to a boundaryless or protean pattern (Bussolari & Goodell, Reference Bussolari and Goodell2009; Forrier et al., Reference Forrier, Sels and Stynen2009; Harrison, Reference Harrison2006; Stoltz et al. Reference Stoltz, Wolff, Monroe, Mazahreh and Farris2013) described by postmodern career theories (Cochran, Reference Cochran1997; Gelatt, Reference Gelatt1989, Reference Gelatt1995; Mitchell, Levin, & Krumboltz, Reference Mitchell, Levin and Krumboltz1999; Krumboltz, Reference Krumboltz1998a, Reference Krumboltz1998b; Pryor & Bright, Reference Pryor and Bright2003, Reference Pryor and Bright2005, Reference Pryor and Bright2006, Reference Pryor and Bright2007; Valach & Young, Reference Valach and Young2004). Empirical research has offered support for the idea that those who wisely utilise both yin and yang types of career strategies could have career satisfaction and experience wellbeing and resilience (Hsiao, Reference Hsiao2006; Kao & Liu, S., Reference Kao and Liu2012; Lee, Reference Lee2010; Peng, Hung, & Liu, S., Reference Peng, Hung, Lin and Liu2013; Liu, S. et al., Reference Liu, Wang, Chen, Deng, Yang, Lin, Su and Lu2013). For example, the Middle Way beliefs, accepting the coexistence of yin and yang and emphasising equilibrium and harmony, have been found to: (1) positively associate with life satisfaction (Huang, Lin & Yang, Reference Huang, Lin and Yang2012); and (2) mitigate the harm from hindrance-related stress on employee wellbeing, weaken the negative effects of challenge-related stress on emotional exhaustion, and transform challenge-related stress into eustress for job satisfaction (Chou, Chu, Yeh, & Chen, Reference Chou, Chu, Yeh and Chen2014).

A conceptual framework of career views was used to merge the above-mentioned career propositions based on Chinese wisdom from the Classic of Changes with Western career theories. The concept of career view contains two parts: career vision and ways of being-in-the-world (projecting strategies). Career visionFootnote 3 identifies what an individual wants in his or her career; including chosen goals, career directions, and/or delineated pictures of ideal lives. Projecting strategies identify how an individual gets what s/he wants or takes what s/he is given. Career vision and projecting strategies answer two essential existential questions, the reasons of being and the actions of being. Together, they illustrate an individual's being. Everyone has his or her own career view, which indicates his or her ideal career development and favoured career development strategies (Liu, S., Reference Liu1996, Reference Liu2005; Liu, S., & Chu, Reference Liu and Chu1998).

Table 1 denotes the characteristics of two career paradigms in terms of career view and praxis (Liu, S. et al., Reference Liu, Hung, Huang, Wang and Peng2015; Liu, S., & Wang, Reference Liu and Wang2014; Liu, S. et al., Reference Liu, Chen, Lu, Lu and Ching2014). The P-E fit paradigm considers a matched job as the ideal career development and prefers rational strategies to achieve job security. Such an approach considers career uncertainty as something bad and tries to remove it by choosing and controlling. Western postmodern career theories valued openness and appreciated multiple possible selves and occupations as ideal career visions. They consider career uncertainty as something good and try to capitalise on it by appreciating and adapting. Strategies of choosing and controlling emphasise rational and analytic thinking to capture a precise understanding of self and environment, utilising quantitative assessment results and factual career information. Strategies of appreciating and adapting, on the other hand, emphasise dialectical and holistic thinking to obtain experiential understanding of self and environment by immersing into narratives or artistic creation. While modernism focuses on yang only and postmodern stresses yin much more than yang, our VEC model values both yang and yin.

Table 1 The Characteristics of Two Career Paradigms

Note: 1This column lists those which are shared by both P-E fit and postmodern career paradigms.

2 This column lists only those which are unique to a postmodern career paradigm.

Individuals’ career views and praxis differ across cultures. A literature review has indicated that perceived opportunities for choice create the illusion of control, which is a biological imperative for survival; nevertheless, the perception of control, the value of choice, and the preference to exert control can be altered as a result of personal development, personality, learning history, and cultural experiences (Leotti, Iyengar, & Ochsner, Reference Leotti, Iyengar and Ochsner2010). People in a Western culture tend to use rational and analytic thinking while East Asians tend to use dialectical and holistic thinking (Nisbett, Peng, Choi, & Norenzayan, Reference Nisbett, Peng, Choi and Norenzayan2001). Specifically, Hong Kong Chinese spend less time on decisions and parse through both important and less important information more efficiently, whereas European Canadians spend more time on decisions and selectively focus on important information (Li, Masuda, & Russell, Reference Li, Masuda and Russell2015).

What is the ultimate aim of one's career evolution process? What is the underlying meaning of life of one's career vision? Confucian interpretations of the Classic of Changes are primarily ethical (Yao, Reference Yao2013). At the individual level, Confucian ethics are about how to realise oneself as fully self-conscious being-for-itself. It assumes that one's self needs to be created, developed, and realised in the ethical life while the potentiality of building a self is given (Chen, Reference Chen2014). Specifically, one is expected to possess both yin virtue (embracing all aspects of humanity and accommodating all matters in this world, 厚德載物) and yang virtue (unceasingly striving for improving themselves with their great perseverance, 自強不息). At the relational level, Confucius makes a gentleman (君子) distinctive from a petty person (小人), the former being harmonious but not identical (和而不同), while the latter is the opposite (同而不和). Such harmony is interpreted as the result of principled conciliation with others, in which the morally cultivated person seeks good from others and at the same time exerts good effect on these others, by which a new, interactive and harmonious relationship is established (Yao, Reference Yao2013). Moral quality demonstrated in the harmonising process is not only descriptive, but also simultaneously a political ideal. At the societal/political level, the Confucian ideal is a benevolent government (仁政), energised by the ruler's parental love toward his/her people.

Two perspectives constitute the Confucian ideal of rulership: inward sageliness and outward kingliness (內聖外王; Liu, J., Reference Liu2014; Kim, Reference Kim2012; Yao, Reference Yao2013). Hanfeizi, the most sophisticated political theorist of Legalism in ancient China, criticised the Confucian political ideal by pointing out that: (1) even within the family, parental love falls short of making the children orderly; and (2) ren as love (仁愛) inevitably confuses what is right/meritorious with what is not, and thus disrupts the legal system. However, Kim (Reference Kim2012) defends Confucian virtue politics against Hanfeizi's criticisms. He argues that the ruler practises the Kingly Way (王道) by extending his benevolent heart that he naturally has for his or her own family members to his or her people. What constitutes orderliness is not legality but ren as love, especially the ruler's parental love for his people. In sum, life, and by extension career development, is an endless process of cultivating inward sageliness, relational kindheartedness, and living a moral life while being entangled by worldly affairs.

Accordingly, an ideal career development is harmonious via wisely utilised yin and yang types of career strategies to handle all kinds of career issues (Hsiao, Reference Hsiao2006; Kao & Liu, Reference Kao and Liu2012; Lee, Reference Lee2010; Peng, Hung, Lin, & Liu, Reference Peng, Hung, Lin and Liu2013; Liu, S. et al., Reference Liu, Wang, Chen, Deng, Yang, Lin, Su and Lu2013). At the same time, self-cultivation is the core underlying the application of these career strategies. The resulting career evolution is twofold: one is experience, as living on the earth (活在世間), and the other is meaning or cultivation, as living out of te (活出德性; Liu, S., et al., Reference Liu, Hung, Huang, Wang and Peng2015; Liu, S. & Wang, Reference Liu and Wang2014; Liu, S. et al., Reference Liu, Chen, Lu, Lu and Ching2014). Through the realisation of their career visions, individuals fulfill their life's meaning and moral obligations. Furthermore, their career development continuously evolves by the virtuous loop of construction, implementation, reflection, and reconstruction.

Construction of Career Genesis

Career Genesis (CG; http://careering.ncue.edu.tw/genesis/) is the junior high school version of Chinese Career Net ([CCN]: http://careering.heart.net.tw/), a career assistance network originally designed to help college students with their career development. CG now uses the common language of junior high school students and gaming techniques to make career exploration a computer game experience for the users. Its outputs can be posted to The Blue Booklet to meet the TMOE's requirements. Both CG and CCN were funded by the CCRC.

The theoretical base of CG is our VEC model. It utilises CCN's career measurements to assess the students’ career characteristics, to assist their competency in choosing and controlling. The CCN occupation database provides concrete information to help students locate their career directions. The measurements of career evolution are for the purpose of students’ development of adapting and appreciating uncertainty and change over the course of career development. From CG, students can have (1) test results and interpretations (yang), (2) the match ratings between their career characteristics and the career options, such as educational majors and occupations (yang), (3) factual information of their possible career paths (yang), (4) developmental career stories (yin), and (5) understanding of their career evolution styles, capacities, and status (yang and yin). Guidance teachers can use CG as a tool to teach, counsel, and understand students’ career development.

Our VEC Career Curriculum

The VEC model makes up for the lack of emphasis on handling career uncertainty in the TMOE's 12-Year Basic Education's career guidance policies. To superimpose the VEC model upon career education, we grappled with the subtlety of its concepts and translated them into prescriptions for career teaching. It encourages junior high school students to utilise both yang and yin projecting strategies to live with the unavoidable uncertainty and rapid change of work requirements in a knowledge-based economy (Liu, S. Chen, Lu, Lu, & Ching, Reference Liu, Chen, Lu, Lu and Ching2014). The conceptual framework of career view, as well as the concepts of career evolution styles, capacities, and status are introduced to help students realise their career visions and life meanings. Specifically, the VEC model helps junior high school students to: (1) synthesise the relationship between their own career characteristics (including occupational interests, life values, aptitudes and capabilities) and career options through narrating their expected and unexpected life experience (yin), (2) rationally construct their perception of the world of work (yang), (3) creatively construct their career visions (yin), and (4) harmoniously utilise both yang and yin projecting strategies to manage the rapid change of today's job market (yang and yin).

The learning goals of VEC career curriculum are fourfold: (1) developing versatile views of reality and constructing various career possibilities, (2) appreciating and mastering their rational and intuitive projecting strategies, (3) treasuring serendipity and making good use of curiosity and flexibility, and (4) managing inevitable change and uncertainty (Liu, S. et al., Reference Liu, Wang, Deng, Keh, Lu and Tsai2014). Table 2 shows the three levels of career guidance missions for junior high school students. The third level includes those of the previous levels. For example, though the unique mission of the VEC curriculum is the application of career evolution concepts, it also includes the shared missions of documentation (The Blue Booklet level) and analytic integration (the P-E fit level). From the perspective of the VEC model, The Blue Booklet level focuses on documenting correct career choices and commitment based on TMOE policy guidelines; the P-E fit level emphasises rational efforts of formulating appropriate career choices and commitment based on the views of guidance teachers; the VEC level pursues a more individualised way of constant and adaptive career evolution based on the student's own perspective. In a sense, the VEC career curriculum reconciles the contradiction between the specialist and generalist approachesFootnote 4 to education and career. The former succeeds in terms of commitment while the latter excels in terms of versatility.

Table 2 Three Levels of Career Guidance Missions for Junior High School Students

Note: The documentation of the blue brochure is the first (basic) level, the analytical integration of P-E fit curriculum (the second level) is built upon the first level, and the VEC curriculum is the third level which includes the first two levels.

Action Research Method: Reflection-On-Action and Critical-Emancipatory

This is a 3-year VEC career guidance project with a research team of school counsellors, teachers and administration staff from the Tainan Student Counseling Center, NCUE, and Tainan's Department of Education. We have adopted an action research approach, which consists of two parts, reflection-on-action and critical-emancipatory (Schön, Reference Schön1983; Winter, Reference Winter and Zuber-Skerritt1996). The research action to be reflected upon includes problem identification, program selection, team recruitment, implementation, and evaluation. Critical-emancipatory refers to the application of the practice results to liberate the old paradigms and replace them with new approaches. The focus of the first year was to: (1) make connections to promote and establish the VEC project; (2) train VEC instructors, counselling administration staff, and guidance teachers of Tainan junior high schools; (3) facilitate the completion of the administration and interpretations of CCN tests for all junior high school students in Tainan; and (4) hold a career lesson teaching contest. The second year included: (1) the development of CG and VEC teaching materials, (2) volunteer participants in VEC trainings, and (3) the introduction of our CG and VEC model to counties other than Tainan. The application and effectiveness evaluation of VEC started in the third year.

A Core Cooperation Team

The project started with a main team consisting of supervisors from the TainanFootnote 5 Department of Education, the chair and (current and former) career coordinators of Tainan Student Counseling Center, the chair of the Chinese Career Research Center (CCRC), and the principal and guidance teachers from the junior high school designated to administer career guidance in Tainan. The Tainan Student Counseling Center (TSCC) submitted a proposal to the Tainan Department of Education and received funding. The Tainan Student Counseling Center worked with the designated school to implement the project in Tainan. The Chinese Career Research Center provided consultation, data collection and analyses, and CG, an internet career resource.

Research Projects and Participants

In the first year, the CCRC trained 330 guidance teachers and provided test services to 24,250 students in Tainan. The TSCC held a career lesson teaching contest for which 45 guidance teachers submitted 90 lesson reports.

In the second year, the CCRC invited 10 guidance teachers who had won the teaching contest and 18 guidance teachers with information technology (IT) or testing backgrounds to form the VEC curriculum development team and the VEC IT development team respectively. Then, the TSCC held workshops and delivered products developed from these two groups, which resulted in 120 guidance teachers and 2,000 students using CG.

In the third year, a class of 30 junior high school students received three VEC career classes and a female member of VEC curriculum development team was invited to coordinate the effectiveness evaluation of VEC teaching materials.

Measures

Evaluation criteria for action

Effects of this action research were examined using Liu, J. et al.’s (Reference Liu, Ng, Gastardo-Conaco and Wong2008) principles of interconnectedness. While most Western action research uses the term democracy to highlight their equality and participation features, Liu J. et al. advocated the term interconnectedness instead to identify action researchers’ ‘managing contradictions, tolerating deeper elements of paradox, and synthesising the beauty of complex patterns’ (2008, p. 1170). Their proposition was adopted since it is congruent with the yin-yang fluxion principles applied in this study. Five interconnectedness indexes were adapted in this research, including: (1) acquiring feedback in a cyclical-spiral process of reflection-on-action and critical-emancipatory; (2) social relation-building to plant seeds in different social positions for future actions; (3) reflexivity of participants in terms of increasing awareness of how they can deal with career issues differently; (4) empowerment by providing training, opportunities, and resources for career explorers and career services practitioners; and (5) social change in terms of changing the career guidance practice of junior high schools in Taiwan.

Assessments for our VEC model

Three CCN assessments were used in the VEC curriculum: Career Evolution Style Inventory, CCN Career Evolution Capacity Inventory, and Career Evolution Status Inventory (Liu, et al, Reference Liu, Wang, Chen, Deng, Yang, Lin, Su and Lu2013; Liu, Chen, Lu, & Su, under review; Lu et al., in press). These measures included an existential career view. The CCN Career Evolution Style Inventory has 10 items to assess students’ yin and yang types of career strategies, namely choosing and controlling as well as appreciating and adapting in our VEC model. The CCN Career Evolution Capacity Inventory has 22 items and results in four subscales of Analysis, Resilience, Adaptation, and Aspiration. Analysis indexes rational data-collecting-and-analysing and decision-making and resilience points to the ability to overcome career uncertainty, challenges and difficulties; and these two constitute yang types of career evolution capacity. Adaptation refers to the elasticity to achieve harmony within one's own life and between one and one's surroundings, while aspiration represents the power to pursue one's own dreams; and these two together signify yin types of career evolution capacity. The CCN Career Evolution Status Inventory uses five items to determine the overall career development status, with higher scores symbolising a career goal acceptable to both individuals and their families. We used the data from 19,626 Tainan junior high school students to examine the reliability and validity of these three measurements. They all had good internal consistency (αs ranging from .75 to .88). Exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis results indicated good construct validity (see Table 3).

Table 3 The Confirmative Factor Analysis Results of the Three Career Evolution Measurements

Research Action and Outcome

Tainan's Main Forces and Problems when Implementing TMOE's Career Guidance Requirements Before the VEC Project

Before the VEC project was proposed in Tainan, its Department of Education and Student Counseling Center followed the guidelines and instructions of the TMOE. Junior high schools were required to have students complete career measures based on the P-E fit paradigm, participate in career information gathering tours (such as occupation site visits), and document all their career exploration activities and results in The Blue Booklet. All the schools and the students followed these requests because the Ministry of Education uses the information in the booklet as one of the senior high school enrolment selection criteria, and junior high schools are evaluated according to their completion rates.

Teachers used two approaches to meet this requirement. One was to just complete the booklet without any reflection or discussion. The other was that teachers used the booklet as a guideline to plan and teach about careers. Though the latter approach was better, it still employed the P-E fit paradigm that we consider to be incomplete in terms of being able to solve the difficulties created by the unavoidable uncertainty of career development.

The Accomplishments and Problems of the First Year of the VEC Project

The Tainan Student Counseling Center has observed the problems in the routine implementation of career guidance policies and the ill fit of the current career curriculum to a knowledge-based economy. The second author, a doctoral graduate of NCUE and a supervisor at the Tainan Student Counseling Center, was a key person. He proposed a longitudinal service and research vision: establish Tainan's CCN test norms and follow up junior high school graduates for 10 years to analyse students’ career development patterns. He talked to managers in various institutes, such as the Tainan Department of Education, Tainan Student Counseling Center, Chinese Career Research Center, and possible designated schools for research.

In order to improve career guidance in Tainan, the Tainan Student Counseling Center worked with the Chinese Career Research Center to promote our VEC model, and successfully proposed this project to the Tainan Department of Education. This was an effort to combine teaching practice, education administration, and academia. In addition to success in gaining sponsorship from the Tainan Department of Education, the accomplishments of the first year included: (1) 24,250 junior high school students’ completion of the three CCN career inventories and receipt interpretation, (2) VEC training of 330 guidance teachers, and (3) a VEC career lesson teaching contest that attracted 90 participants and resulted in 20 winners.

The core cooperation team met every 3 months to discuss the progress on the VEC project and the feedback and questions from the workshop participants and the teachers who conducted the CCN tests with their students. Frequent issues raised were: (1) this project increased teachers’ workload, and (2) it interfered with the progress of their regular class schedules. The teachers suggested the test result outputs could be pasted into The Blue Booklet. We also found that the majority of the lesson plans for the contest still focused on occupational interest. This showed that many of these teachers had not thought about integrating our VEC model into their teaching.

It seems that while focusing on promoting the VEC project, we did not pay attention to the problems caused by the dynamics between the TMOE, guidance teachers, and the student counselling centres. We will analyse this problem in the next section.

The Accomplishments and Suggestions of the Second Year of VEC Project

Three adjustments to the VEC project were made after team discussions of first-year issues. First, the results sheets with CCN measurements were modified to fit The Blue Booklet. Second, we recruited 10 winners of the career lesson teaching contest from the first year to form a VEC curriculum development group and 18 guidance teachers for a VEC IT group. The first group met monthly to discuss the development of an easy-to-administer VEC curriculum. In addition to getting their inputs, this increased the teachers’ autonomy and agency through rigorous participation. The second group provided materials and suggestions to the CCRC through their comments on the CG. The third adjustment was to provide a VEC curriculum workshop instead of just lectures on the VEC model, with the hope that the teachers would integrate the model into their curriculum. The materials and the instructors of the seminars were from the VEC curriculum development groups, and the participants were voluntarily enrolled rather than through the mandatory participation required of the first year's seminars.

There were a total of 120 participants in the three seminars. Most of them provided positive feedback such as: ‘The instruction and materials from the first-line teachers are practical and meet our clinical teaching needs’; ‘The seminar reminded me to use the blue booklet to construct useful career lessons for my students instead of just completing it for TMOE's evaluation requirements’; ‘After the seminar, I realised that career development is dynamic and is more than planning. This definitely changes the way I instruct my career classes.’ Some of them even suggested that we should give the seminars in all regions of Tainan so they can be available to the teachers of schools in rural areas.

Our Action Strategies to Manage the Phenomenon of ‘Making Policies Versus Circumventing Policies’

To implement this VEC project, it was anticipated there would be conflicts between the TMOE, guidance teachers’ implementation of the project, and our professional counselling knowledge. The conflict between us and the TMOE was over the choice of paradigms. Although the TMOE adopted the P-E fit model, they were open to other models as long as it helped them to promote career guidance. We were able to present the VEC model to persuade the TMOE to let us try out this model in their training workshops for guidance teachers. The conflict that guidance teachers had with us and the TMOE was the workload. Before their participation in the VEC project, and although guidance teachers might appreciate the TMOE's good intentions in enhancing career guidance, they were not comfortable that they were forced to accommodate a heavy additional workload and were mandated to complete The Blue Booklet. Therefore, they used a common saying, ‘the superiors can make policies and the subordinates always have the strategies to circumvent them’, to manage the TMOE's requirements and their regular work obligations.

In the first year of this project, we enthusiastically prepared seminars with the hope of attracting guidance teachers’ attention to the benefits of the VEC model and CCN resources. We also took advantage of the TMOE's mandatory request to reinforce the 12-Year Basic Education policy. We presented and promoted the VEC project at the mandatory career workshops and seminars for guidance teachers. Such a mandating strategy turned out to be a mistake. Since teachers were much more interested in ‘learning what to do’, our enthusiasm for theoretical awakening failed to attract their attention. It should not be surprising that teachers would simply take our effort as another government mandate and might want to find some way to get around it. In other words, we, as Confucians, by attracting, invited guidance teachers to extend their parental love for their own family members to their students. At the same time, by mandating, we, like Hanfeizi, requested guidance teachers to follow what we thought was good for them and their students. What was missing was our parent love for guidance teachers.

Therefore, simplifying was added and became the core strategy in the second year. By simplifying, we actualise our yin and yang virtues with harmony and show our parent love for guidance teachers before we ask them to love their students. We used simplifying to make our attracting noticed and easily understood, and to make our mandating accepted and easily accomplished. In addition to lectures on the VEC model, we also worked on constructing comprehensive and easy-to-administer VEC teaching materials and CG. We also provided CCN measurement outputs to fit the format of The Blue Booklet. These practical teaching and testing materials were to help guidance teachers to be able to easily use the VEC model to fulfill the TMOE's reinforcement of career guidance. Our efforts received good feedback. For example, the three VEC model workshops attracted 120 guidance teachers (about one third of all the guidance teachers in Tainan) to participate voluntarily, thus awakening their professional identity.

In addition to the abovementioned simplifying and attracting strategies, mandating was used as well. With the help of the Tainan Student Counseling Center, the CCRC took advantage of a nationwide mandatory meeting to promote the VEC model and its practical teaching and testing materials. We successfully attracted four other counties to consider the VEC model and CG for their mandatory career guidance by the TMOE. In total, five of the 23 total counties of Taiwan were interested in our VEC model and CG.

Multiple-Win Effect By the Strategies of Mandating, Attracting, and Simplifying

By reflecting on our action process, we found the three useful strategies of mandating, attracting, and simplifying. Furthermore, the project results met the five indexes of interconnectedness (Liu, J. et al., Reference Liu, Ng, Gastardo-Conaco and Wong2008). This project included administrators, researchers, and teachers (building social relations). We required feedback and the core team met every 3 months to make adjustments accordingly. For participants’ reflection (reflexivity), VEC workshops attracted one third of all the guidance teachers in Tainan and increased their appreciation of a virtual existential career view. In terms of empowerment, the participants were encouraged to provide feedback and seek consultation and resources. As a result of their feedback in the first year, a VEC curriculum and CG were established. The strongest evidence of social change is that more than a fourth of counties in Taiwan have subsequently invited our team to share our VEC model, VEC curriculum and CG.

Outcome and Evaluation of our VEC Curriculum

We did have some positive feedback about the effects of our VEC curriculum during the second year. Nevertheless, as this project took place in the field, it was not possible for guidance teachers to implement the VEC curriculum in a standardised form and to undertake pretests and posttests; thus, the positive feedback during the second year lacked methodological rigor. In the third year, to examine the effect of our VEC curriculum more precisely, a class of 30 junior high school students was instructed by a VEC-trained guidance teacher for three class periods, 45 minutes per period. The classes included instruction of exploration of self and occupation information, the introduction of the VEC's career evolution concepts, and the administration and interpretation of the three career evolution tests. The students were encouraged to collect and analyse objective information (yang) and to use expressive means (such as narratives or collages) to creatively construct their career visions (yin). Figure 1 is a collage of a student from the class. In this collage, the student identified his occupational interest based on the CCN Occupational Interest Inventory (yang) and put together information collected from life experience (yin) and CG (yang) in an artistic way (yin).

Note: Chinese words at the top mean ‘investigative type’ (one of Holland's interest types). The Chinese words in the centre mean ‘computer engineer’, an investigative type of occupation; the words in the middle circle, as information collected from the student's life experience, mean: (1) studying all kinds of hardware, software, and programing; (2) developing new-tech products; (3) repairing various electronic products; (4) writing programs; and (5) working with a lot of wires and equipment. The words in the outer circle, as information collected from CG, mean: (1) designing and testing computer hardware, software, and operation systems; (2) innovating and developing computer hardware and peripherals; (3) monitoring and repairing equipment to maintain stable function of computer systems; (4) writing and maintaining programs to handle particular affairs; and (5) assembling and modifying equipment and spare parts in case of need.

Figure 1 Example of a student's work in the VEC class.

According to t test results in Table 4, the immediate impacts of the VEC career classes included significant improvement of resilience, adaptation and liking of career decisions reported by the students. Given that the three class periods were only 135 minutes in total, such a result was impressive. It showed that a yin-yang-blending career guidance course might empower students to handle career uncertainty, challenges and difficulties, as well as achieve harmony in situations of complexity and conflict. More importantly, students reported that by exploring objective and subjective occupational information using the CCN Occupational Interest Inventory, and practising both yin and yang career strategies and career development capacities, they felt more positive about their career decisions.

Table 4 The t Test Results of VEC Pre- and Post-Tests

Note: *p < .05

Future Vision of Living up to the Tao

This project was designed to promote a new career view based on the Classic of Changes, including appreciation of and mastering uncertainty. Its real-world practice happened when the Taiwanese government made a dramatic change to secondary education called the 12-Year Basic Education. This change required school staff and faculty to provide career guidance to assist students’ career development, especially the educational choice of junior high school students after their graduation. Even with the uncertain nature of this task and the trend of the current knowledge-based economy, the TMOE requires educators to use traditional P-E fit concepts. We used this opportunity to advocate our VEC model to provide a better career model and to assist the teachers and the TMOE to implement career guidance for junior high school students.

This project fulfilled and went beyond the mandatory requirements of the TMOE's 12-Year Basic Education. Our VEC model improves the traditional career guidance model. The modified VEC career curriculum is simple and easy to administer, so that it attracts school guidance teachers to use it. Guidance teachers also receive professional training. The resources of teaching materials, the CG, and professional consultation have been established and are available to the public. The successful teamwork demonstrates an example of good collaboration among teachers, government agencies, student counselling centres, and academia. Our action results demonstrated effectiveness in terms of the five indexes of interconnectedness (Liu, J. et al., Reference Liu, Ng, Gastardo-Conaco and Wong2008).

The empirical support of the effectiveness of our VEC curriculum shed light on further elaboration of yin-yang blending career guidance. In the field in Taiwan, modernist career practitioners who neglect the power of self-constructing tend to utilise the yang career strategies only, shown in the P-E fit column of Table 1, while postmodernist career practitioners who underestimate the importance of objectivity tend to focus on yin career strategies only, shown in the postmodern column of Table 1. It is expected that both groups of practitioners might benefit from a yin-yang-blending approach. Furthermore, a movement toward yin-yang-blending career guidance might induce profound social change in terms of Taiwanese people's career development. Our VEC curriculum is one example of yin-yang-blending career guidance. Future research might: (1) examine the effectiveness of our VEC curriculum with more rigorous methodology, (2) develop and testify VEC curricula for diverse populations, (3) investigate thoroughly our VEC model from both theoretical and practical perspectives, and (4) innovate various yin-yang-blending career guidance approaches derived from the yin-yang philosophy of the Classic of Changes.

Our success with using the combination of mandating, attracting, and simplifying strategies has a theoretical value for social change. The TMOE has the power and resources to facilitate a social change. Our professional knowledge has the power to establish a creative career guidance model based on the Classic of Changes. We used the rational part (yang) of the CG and VEC curriculum to support the TMOE's career guidance policy, and the TMOE permitted us to use their power and resources to promote the intuitive part (yin) of the CG and VEC curriculum. Western action research has its root in critical theory and considers political power and social resources as the keys to social change. According to such a perspective together with the TMOE we should have enough power and resources to reinforce our CG and VEC curriculum. Nevertheless, from field observations and communications with guidance teachers, we realised that although guidance teachers are subordinates of TMOE and have little political power and social resources, they do have implementation privilege. Only when we transferred our power to offer them neng (能, abilities) and fang (方, method) with simplifying, were they willing to move from an administrative role (completion of the TMOE's request) to a professional role (devotion to career guidance; Yao, Reference Yao2012). This power of implementing privilege is well stated in the Chinese saying ‘the superiors can make policies and the subordinates always have strategies to circumvent them’.

The significant role of simplifying indicates that the key to successfully implementing an action project is to empower as well as enable the first line executers. The virtue of simplifying reflects the following statement from the Classic of Changes (http://ctext.org/zh):

Qian [the Creative] is for easy knowledge and Kun [the Receptive] is for simple implementation. Easy knowledge enables easy understanding and simple implementation provides an easy path to follow. People like knowledge that is easy to understand and they can gain success if the path is easy to follow. . . . If things can become easy and simple, people can obtain all the knowledge. When people obtain all the knowledge, they will successfully exist in between Qian [Heaven] and Kun [Earth].

The effectiveness of the three precepts of mandating, attracting, and simplifying instead of one or two alone illuminates wisdom of social change. As professional institutes, the TSCC and CCRC use mandating to take advantage of their superior political power and social resources, attracting to awaken the virtue within the subordinates, and simplifying to relieve the burden on the subordinates and make the strategies of mandating and attracting work. This combination of strategies creates a multiple-win situation for the TMOE (the superiors), guidance teachers (the subordinates) and our research team (the professionals). It demonstrates the wisdom of the Classic of Changes, as what is revealed in the yin-yang fluxion principles of mutual completion and enhancement, generation by opposition, and joint production, inclusive opposites are the power and energy of the necessary harmonising process underlying social changes; through harmonising, elements are brought into a dialectic relationship and are thereby constructed to form a new organism. The effectiveness of the three strategies also echo the Confucian ideal of inward sageliness and outward kingliness. In our experience, the first line workers’ strategies of circumventing policies can defeat all kinds of legal reinforcement promoted by Hanfeizi. We need to extend our parental love to take care of those implementing a new system. That is to say, professionals, government members, and any kind of superiors in social change projects need to cultivate their own relational kindheartedness and build up benevolent relationships with their subordinates before the superiors can provide a helpful service to people or induce valuable social change. Future research may investigate the relationships among the strategies of mandating, attracting, and simplifying from the perspective of Chinese yin-yang philosophy.

With our VEC model, we began with an intention of assisting individuals to handle career issues as well as to achieve the de (德性, virtue) and to live up to the tao between heaven and earth, which had been the essential wisdom of the Classic of Changes. The research findings drew our attention to the fact that the superiors in social change projects need to achieve the de and to live up to the tao to induce social change. With reflexivity, not only the students who participated in our project learned to apply Chinese yin-yang philosophy to their career development, but also the ‘superiors’ in our project learned to apply Chinese yin-yang philosophy to career guidance and social progress. The so-called ‘superiors’ included ourselves (as action researchers and career professionals) and members in our core cooperation team (as career coordinators or professionals). This reflexive element is also the Confucian wisdom derived from the Classic of Changes. Chinese yin-yang philosophy is applicable to many situations, and our VEC model is a particular instance of it in a particular context. Future research may investigate various applications of Chinese yin-yang philosophy to facilitate social science to catch up with rapid change in the era of knowledge-based economy.

Acknowledgments

The first year data has been published in The Archive of Guidance & Counseling in Taiwan. The authors acknowledge financial support from the Tainan Student Counseling Center and professional help from the VEC curriculum development group and the VEC IT group. Special thanks are given to two VEC-trained guidance teachers, Hsing Chun Tsai from the Tainan Municipal Daciao Junior High School and Chi Ya Yu from the Tainai Munlcipal Fusing Junior High School, who gave the VEC lessons in the third year. This article was based on the following projects: (1) one service project sponsored by Tainan Education Bureau, Taiwan (2013.6.1~2014.12.31); and (2) two research projects sponsored by Taiwan Ministry of Science and Technology (NSC 102-2410-H-034-005 for 2013.8.1~2014.7.31 and MOST 103-2410-H-018 -008 for 2014.8.1~2015.9.31).

Footnotes

1 It is important to note that Confucian philosophy draws from yin-yang philosophy, which is older, and functions as a root metaphor for Chinese culture; see J.H. Liu (Reference Liu2014)

2 The VEC model is renamed from the TSG model, a model of career development touching the sky yet grounded (Liu, S., & Wang, Reference Liu and Wang2014; Liu, S., Wang, C., Deng, Keh, Lu, Y., & Tsai, Reference Liu, Wang, Deng, Keh, Lu and Tsai2014). The new name is to highlight the ethico-spiritual aspect of the Classic of Changes.

3 The term career vision is based on a narrative-and-phenomenological perspective. While the more widely used terms career aspirations and career expectations focus on specific educational or occupational goals (such as going to medical school or becoming a doctor), career vision covers more holistic directions of career (such as helping others), or delineated or portrayed pictures of ideal lives (such as being a doctor, working at a superior hospital and a top-ranking medical school at the same time, having a supportive husband, and living with one's parents and children).

4 According to the mutual completion and enhancement, generation by opposition, and joint production principles underlying the yin-yang fluxions, our VEC model transcends the specialist and generalist dilemma of higher education. All kinds of specialists or generalists are actually at various points on a specialist-generalist continuum (Ludlow, Reference Ludlow2014; Nicholson, Reference Nicholson2005; Petrinic & Urquhart, Reference Petrinic and Urquhart2007; Phillips, Reference Phillips2008; Smith, Reference Smith2005), students in all school levels, including all higher education institutes, need to practise both yin and yang projecting strategies as well as pursuing career visions reconciling the ideal with the realistic.

5 Tainan is one of the five municipalities directly under the central government in Taiwan. It is located in the southern part of Taiwan, with about 2,192 sq km and 1,880,000 people.

References

Adams, M. (2006). Towards an existential phenomenological model of life span human development. Existential Analysis, 17, 261280.Google Scholar
Afifi, W.A., Dillow, M.R., & Morse, C. (2004). Examining predictors and consequences of information seeking in close relationships. Personal Relationships, 11, 429449.Google Scholar
Al-Hawamdeh, S. (2005). Introduction to the special topic section: Knowledge management in Asia. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 56, 11541155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amundson, N.E., Parker, P., & Arthur, M.B. (2002). Merging two worlds: Linking occupational and organisational career counselling. Australian Journal of Career Development, 11, 2635.Google Scholar
Borgen, W.A. (1999). Implementing ‘Starting Points’: A follow-up study. Journal of Employment Counseling, 36, 98114.Google Scholar
Bussolari, C.J., & Goodell, J.A. (2009). Chaos theory as a model for life transitions counseling: Nonlinear dynamics and life's change. Journal of Counseling & Development, 87, 98107.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chang, L. (2014). College students’ search for sexual health information from their best friends: An application of the theory of motivated information management. Asian Journal of Social Psychology, 17, 196205.Google Scholar
Chen, C. (2002). Introduction to ‘Yi Zhangju’ [in Chinese]. Jinan: Chi-lu.Google Scholar
Chen, H., & Chiu, T. (2005). The working environment and changing role of corporate librarians in Taiwan. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 56, 12271236.Google Scholar
Chen, X. (2014). The ethics of self: Another version of Confucian ethics. Asian Philosophy, 24, 6781. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09552367.2014.871116 Google Scholar
Cheng, C. (2009a). On harmony as transformation: Paradigms from the Yijing 《易經》. Journal of Chinese Philosophy, 36 (Suppl.), 1136.Google Scholar
Cheng, C. (2009b). Paradigm of change (Yi易) in classical Chinese philosophy: Part I. Journal of Chinese Philosophy, 36, 516530.Google Scholar
Cheng, C. (2011). Inquiring into the primary model: Yi jing and the onto-hermeneutical tradition. Journal of Chinese Philosophy, 30, 289312.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cheng, C. (2013). Preface: Chinese philosophy as world philosophy: Humanity and creativity. Journal of Chinese Philosophy, 40, 365370.Google Scholar
Chou, L. Chu, C. Yeh, H., & Chen, J. (2014). Work stress and employee well-being: The critical role of Zhong-Yong. Asian Journal of Social Psychology, 17, 115127.Google Scholar
Cochran, L. (1997). Career counseling: A narrative approach. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.Google Scholar
Commonwealth of Australia. (2002). Employability skills for the future. Retrieved September 20, 2014, from http://www.voced.edu.au/content/ngv12484.Google Scholar
Council for the Advancement of Standards in Higher Education (CAS). (2009). CAS General Standards. Retrieved September 20, 2014, from http://standards.cas.edu/getpdf.cfm?PDF=E868395C-F784-2293-129ED7842334B22A Google Scholar
Delia Rocca, A., & Kostanski, M. (2001, September), Teacher education: Change of heart, mind and action. Paper presented at the ATEA Conference, Melbourne, Australia.Google Scholar
Fan, W., Cheung, F.M. Leong, F.T.L., & Cheung, S.F. (2014). Contributions of family factors to career readiness: A cross-cultural comparison. The Career Development Quarterly, 62, 194209. doi:10.1002/j.2161-0045.2014.00079.x CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Forrier, A., Sels, L., & Stynen, D. (2009). Career mobility at the intersection between agent and structure: A conceptual model. Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology, 82, 739759.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fu, L. (1981). Interpretations of ‘Zhou Yi’ [in Chinese]. Taipei: Commercial.Google Scholar
Fu, P. (2011). Be content with what one is: Fu, P. on ‘Classic of Changes’ [in Chinese]. Taipei: Commonwealth.Google Scholar
Gelatt, H.B. (1989). Positive uncertainty: A new decision-making framework for counseling. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 36, 252256. doi:10.1037/0022-0167.36.2.252 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gelatt, H.B. (1995). Chaos and compassion. Counseling and Values, 39, 108116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harrison, R. (2006). From landlines to cell phones: Negotiating identity positions in new career contexts. Journal of Employment Counseling, 43, 1830.Google Scholar
Herr, E.L. (1999). Counseling in a dynamic society: Contexts and practices for the 21st century. Alexandria, VA: American Counseling Association.Google Scholar
Herr, S.L., Cramer, S.H., & Niles, S.G. (2004). Career guidance and counseling through the lifespan: Systematic approaches (6th ed.). Boston, MA: Allyn & Bacon.Google Scholar
Holland, J.L. (1997). Making vocational choices: A theory of vocational personalities and work (3rd ed.). Odessa, FL: Psychological Assessment Resource.Google Scholar
Hsiao, C. (2006). Constructing of and pursuing happiness in career-life course (Unpublished master's thesis) [in Chinese]. National Changhua University of Education, Taiwan.Google Scholar
Hu, T., Lin, C., & Chang, S. (2005). Role of interaction between technological communities and industrial clustering in innovative activity: The case of Hsinchu District, Taiwan. Urban Studies, 42, 11391160.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huang, C. (2003). Interpretations of ‘One Yin and One Yang are called Tao’ [in Chinese]. Legein Monthly, 29, 1719.Google Scholar
Huang, C. (2007). New translation of ‘the interpretation of Chien-Kun’ [in Chinese]. Taipei: Sanmin.Google Scholar
Huang, C.L., Lin, Y.C., & Yang, C.F. (2012). Revision of the Zhong-Yong Belief–Value Scale [in Chinese]. Indigenous Psychological Research in Chinese Societies, 38, 341.Google Scholar
Hwang, K. (2005). A philosophical reflection on the epistemology and methodology of indigenous psychologies. Asian Journal of Social Psychology, 8, 517.Google Scholar
Hwang, K. (2009). New approach of indigenous social psychology in the age of globalization. Taiwan Journal of East Asian Studies, 6, 111130. doi:10.6163/tjeas.2009.6(2)111 Google Scholar
Hwang, K.K. (2011). A Proposal for scientific revolution in psychology [in Chinese]. Taipei: Psychological.Google Scholar
Hwang, K.K. (2012). Foundations of Chinese psychology: Confucian social relations. New York: Springer.Google Scholar
I-ru, C.D. (2012). Higher education reform in Taiwan and its implications on equality. Chinese Education & Society, 45, 134151.Google Scholar
Iyengar, S.S., & Lepper, M.R. (1999). Rethinking the value of choice: A cultural perspective on intrinsic motivation. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 76, 349366.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kanter, R.M. (1999a). Change is everyone's job: Managing the extended enterprise in a globally connected world. Organizational Dynamics, 28, 623.Google Scholar
Kanter, R.M. (1999b). From spare change to real change. Harvard Business Review, 77, 122132.Google Scholar
Kanter, R.M. (2003). Thriving locally in the global economy. Harvard Business Review, 87, 119127.Google Scholar
Kao, H., & Liu, S. (2012). Construction and analysis of the Inventory of Career Uncertainty for senior high school students [in Chinese]. Global Mental Health E-Journal, 3, 127.Google Scholar
Kim, S. (2012). Virtue politics and political leadership: A Confucian rejoinder to Hanfeizi. Asian Philosophy, 22, 177197.Google Scholar
Krumboltz, J.D. (1998a). Counsellor actions needed for the new career perspective. British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 26, 559564.Google Scholar
Krumboltz, J.D. (1998b). Serendipity is not serendipitous. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 45, 390392.Google Scholar
Lee, Y. (2010). ‘Cocoon-breaking’: The existence of passion (Unpublished master's thesis) [in Chinese]. National Changhua University of Education, Taiwan.Google Scholar
Leotti, L.A., Iyengar, S.S., & Ochsner, K.N. (2010). Born to choose: The origins and value of the need for control. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 14, 457463.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Li, L.M.W., Masuda, T., & Russell, M.J. (2015). Culture and decision-making: Investigating cultural variations in the East Asian and North American online decision-making processes. Asian Journal of Social Psychology, 18, 183191.Google Scholar
Lin, S. (2004). A retrospection and reflection on recent education reform in Taiwan. Educational Review, 23, 136.Google Scholar
Liu, J.H. (2014). What Confucian philosophy means for Chinese and Asian psychology today: Indigenous roots for a psychology of social change. Journal of Pacific Rim Psychology, 8, 3542. doi 10.1017/prp.2014.10 Google Scholar
Liu, J., McMahon, M., & Watson, M. (2015). Parental influence on child career development in Mainland China: A qualitative study. The Career Development Quarterly, 63, 7487.Google Scholar
Liu, J.H., Ng, S.H., Gastardo-Conaco, M.C., & Wong, D.S.W. (2008). Action research: A missing component in the emergence of social and cross-cultural psychology as a fully inter-connected global enterprise. Social and Personality Psychology Compass, 2/3, 11621181. doi:10.1111/j.1751-9004.2008.00100.x Google Scholar
Liu, J.H., Yeh, K.H., Wu, Z.W., Liu, L., & Yang, Y.Y. (2015). The importance of gender and affect in adolescents’ beliefs about benevolent authority: Evidence from Chinese indigenous psychology. Asian Journal of Social Psychology, 18, 101114. doi:10.1111/ajsp.12102 Google Scholar
Liu, S. (1996). Career view: What did career literature miss [in Chinese]? Guidance Quarterly, 32, 5259.Google Scholar
Liu, S. (2005). A holistic career development model [in Chinese]. In Proceedings of Holistic Guidance and Counseling Training Conference. Changhua, Taiwan: Department of Guidance and Counseling, National Changhua University of Education.Google Scholar
Liu, S., Chen, Y., Lu, L., Lu, Y., & Ching, S. (2014). Existential phenomenological career development project: An Malaysian experience [in Chinese]. Guidance Quarterly, 50, 1323.Google Scholar
Liu, S., Chen, Y., Lu, Y., & Su, F. (under review). The CCN Career Manner-related Battery: Concept, construction, and practice [in Chinese]. Taiwan Counseling Quarterly.Google Scholar
Liu, S., & Chu, H. (1998). A further look at career decision making: Beyond rationality [in Chinese]. Guidance Quarterly, 34, 17.Google Scholar
Liu, S., Hung, J., Huang, T., Wang, C., & Peng, H. (2015, May). Virtue existential career counseling model: From two projecting strategies to four noble truths for career uncertainty. Paper presented at The 1st International Conference of Applied Psychology for Chinese Societies. New Taipei City, Taiwan: Fu-Jen Catholic University.Google Scholar
Liu, S., & Wang, C. (2014). The career model touching-the-sky yet grounded: The theoretical base of Chinese Career Net [in Chinese]. Taiwan Counseling Quarterly, 6, 7687.Google Scholar
Liu, S., & Wang, C., Chen, Y., Deng, C., Yang, Y., Lin, M., Su, F., & Lu, Y. (2013, June). CCN Career Unfording Style Inventory: Construction and application [in Chinese]. Paper presented at the Fifth Forum of the Cross-Strait Four Regions of Higher Education Psychological Counselling and Consultation, Shanghai Ocean University, Shanghai.Google Scholar
Liu, S., Wang, C., Deng, C., Keh, F.B., Lu, Y., & Tsai, Y. (2014). Action research using a Chinese career model of the wisdom of Classic of Changes and its applications. Journal of Pacific Rim Psychology, 8, 8394. doi:10.1017/prp.2014.11 Google Scholar
Liu, Y. (2005). Introduction to ‘Zhou-Yi Interpretation’ [in Chinese]. Jinan: Chi-lu.Google Scholar
Lu, Y., Liu, S., Ching, S., Yu, C., Chiu, J., & Chang, S. (in press). Reflections on the action of implementation of the program of ‘Living out One's Own Career Lifestyle’ in Tainan junior high schools [in Chinese]. The Archive of Guidance & Counseling.Google Scholar
Ludlow, B. (2014). Special educator: Specialist or generalist? Teaching Exceptional Children, 46, 4.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lynch, R.L. (2000). New directions for high school career and technical education in the 21st century. Columbus, OH: ERIC Clearing House on Adult, Career, and Vocational Education. (ERIC No: ED 444 037)Google Scholar
Ma, P.W., & Yeh, C.J. (2005). Factors influencing the career decision status of Chinese American youths. The Career Development Quarterly, 53, 337347.Google Scholar
Mau, W.C. (2004). Cultural dimensions of career decision-making difficulties. The Career Development Quarterly, 53, 6777.Google Scholar
Miller, M.J. (1995). A case for uncertainty in career counseling. Counseling and Values, 39, 162168.Google Scholar
Mitchell, K.E., Levin, A.S., & Krumboltz, J.D. (1999). Planned happenstance: Constructing unexpected career opportunities. Journal of Counseling and Development, 77, 115124.Google Scholar
Nan, H. (1991a). Lectures on ‘Great Appendix’ (vol. 1) [in Chinese]. Taipei: Old Culture.Google Scholar
Nan, H. (1991b). Lectures on ‘Great Appendix’ (vol. 2) [in Chinese]. Taipei: Old Culture.Google Scholar
Nelson, E.S. (2011). The yijing and philosophy: From Leibniz to Derrida. Journal of Chinese Philosophy, 38, 377396.Google Scholar
Nicholson, S. (2005). Understanding the foundation: the state of generalist search education in library schools as related to the needs of expert searchers in medical libraries. Journal of the Medical Library Association, 93, 6168.Google Scholar
Nisbett, R.E., Peng, K., Choi, I., & Norenzayan, A. (2001). Culture and systems of thought: Holistic vs. analytic cognition. Psychological Review, 108, 291310.Google Scholar
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). (2005). The definition and selection of key competencies: Executive summary. OECD. Retrieved September 20, 2014, from http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/47/61/35070367.pdf Google Scholar
Organisation for Economy Cooperation and Development (OECD). (1996). The knowledge based economy. Retrieved April 2, 2015, from http://www.oecd.org/science/sci-tech/1913021.pdf Google Scholar
Partnership for 21st Century Skills. (2008). Framework for 21st century learning. Retrieved September 20, 2014, from http://www.21stcenturyskills.org/documents/framework_flyer_updated_april_2009.pdf Google Scholar
Parsons, F. (1909). Choosing a vocation. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.Google Scholar
Pekerti, A.A. (2008). The interdependent family-centric career: Career perspective of the overseas Chinese in Indonesia. The Career Development Quarterly, 56, 362377.Google Scholar
Peng, H., Hung, J., Lin, C., & Liu, S. (2013). Concept research of career resilience: The career narrative in the secondary data analysis (in Chinese). Taiwan Counseling Quarterly, 5, 1743.Google Scholar
Petrinic, T., & Urquhart, C. (2007). The education and training needs of health librarians—the generalist versus specialist dilemma. Health Information & Libraries Journal, 24, 167176. doi:10.1111/j.1471–1842.2007.00717.x Google Scholar
Phillips, S.P. (2008). Models of medical education in Australia, Europe and North America. Medical Teacher, 30, 705709. doi:10.1080/01421590802061134.Google Scholar
Pryor, R.G.L., & Bright, J.E.H. (2003). The chaos theory of career. Australian journal of Career Development, 12, 1220.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pryor, R.G.L., & Bright, J.E.H. (2005). Chaos in practice: Techniques for career counsellors. Australian Journal of Career Development, 14, 1829.Google Scholar
Pryor, R.G.L., & Bright, J.E.H. (2006). Counseling chaos: Techniques for counselors. Journal of Employment Counseling, 43, 217.Google Scholar
Pryor, R.G.L., & Bright, J.E.H. (2007). Applying chaos theory to careers: Attraction and attractors. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 71, 375400.Google Scholar
Qi, X. (2014). Filial obligation in contemporary China: Evolution of the culture-system. Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour, 45, 141161.Google Scholar
Savickas, M.L. (2000). Renovating the psychology of careers for the twenty-first century. In Collin, A., & Young, R.A. (Eds.), The future of career (pp. 5367). Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Schön, D.A. (1983). The reflective practitioner: How professionals think in action. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Sheldon, K.M., & Elliot, A.J. (1999). Goal striving, need satisfaction, and longitudinal weil-being: The self-concordance model. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 76, 482497.Google Scholar
Shen, R.T. (2003). Some thoughts on intercultural philosophy and Chinese philosophy. Journal of Chinese Philosophy, 30, 357372.Google Scholar
Shie, V.H., & Meer, C.D. (2010). Is this the Asian century? China, India, South Korea and Taiwan in the age of intellectual capitalism. Journal of Contemporary Asia, 40, 121.Google Scholar
Smith, C.A. (2005). An evolution of experts: MEDLINE in the library school. Journal of the Medical Library Association, 93, 5360.Google Scholar
So, B.W.Y. (2005). Book review: ‘The new knowledge economy of Taiwan’, edited by Tain-Jy Chen and Joseph S. Lee. The China Journal, 53, 174176.Google Scholar
Spokane, A.R., Meir, E.I., & Catalano, M. (2000). Person–environment congruence and Holland's theory: A review and reconsideration. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 57, 137187. doi:10.1006/jvbe.2000.1771 Google Scholar
Stoltz, K.B., Wolff, L.A., Monroe, A.E., Mazahreh, L.G., & Farris, H. (2013). Adaptability in the work life task: Life style, stress coping, and protean/boundaryless career attitudes. Journal of Individual Psychology, 69, 6683.Google Scholar
Super, D.E. (1957). The psychology of careers. New York: Harper.Google Scholar
Tang, M. (2002). A Comparison of Asian American, Caucasian American, and Chinese college students: An INITIAL REPORT. Journal of Multicultural Counseling and Development, 30, 124134.Google Scholar
Tinsley, H.E.A. (2000). The congruence myth: An analysis of the efficacy of the person–environment fit model. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 56, 147179. doi:10.1006/jvbe.1999.1727 Google Scholar
Tracey, T.J.G., Darcy, M., & Kovalski, T.M. (2000). A closer look at person–environment fit. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 56, 216224. doi:10.1006/jvbe.1999.1733 Google Scholar
Trevor-Roberts, E. (2006). Are you sure? The role of uncertainty in career. Journal of Employment Counseling, 43, 98116.Google Scholar
Valach, L., & Young, R.A. (2004). Some cornerstones in the development of a contextual action theory of career and counselling. International Journal for Educational and Vocational Guidance, 4, 6180.Google Scholar
Wijers, G.A., & Meijers, F. (1996). Careers guidance in the knowledge society. British Journal of Guidance and Counselling, 24, 185198.Google Scholar
Winter, R. (1996). Some principles and procedures for the conduct of action research. In Zuber-Skerritt, (Ed.), New directions in action research (pp. 1327). London, UK: Falmer.Google Scholar
Wong, W. (2011). The moral and non-moral virtues in Confucian Ethics. Asian Philosophy, 21, 7182.Google Scholar
Yao, X. (2012). The way, virtue, and practical skills in the Analects. Journal of Chinese Philosophy, 39, 2643.Google Scholar
Yao, X. (2013). The way of harmony in the four books. Journal of Chinese Philosophy, 40, 252268.Google Scholar
Yu, B., & Hwang, K. (1991). The influence of formalism and renqing on development of the public-enterprises in Taiwan. Proceedings of the National Science Council, Taiwan, Part C: Humanities and Social Sciences, 1, 113.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1 The Characteristics of Two Career Paradigms

Figure 1

Table 2 Three Levels of Career Guidance Missions for Junior High School Students

Figure 2

Table 3 The Confirmative Factor Analysis Results of the Three Career Evolution Measurements

Figure 3

Figure 1 Example of a student's work in the VEC class.

Note: Chinese words at the top mean ‘investigative type’ (one of Holland's interest types). The Chinese words in the centre mean ‘computer engineer’, an investigative type of occupation; the words in the middle circle, as information collected from the student's life experience, mean: (1) studying all kinds of hardware, software, and programing; (2) developing new-tech products; (3) repairing various electronic products; (4) writing programs; and (5) working with a lot of wires and equipment. The words in the outer circle, as information collected from CG, mean: (1) designing and testing computer hardware, software, and operation systems; (2) innovating and developing computer hardware and peripherals; (3) monitoring and repairing equipment to maintain stable function of computer systems; (4) writing and maintaining programs to handle particular affairs; and (5) assembling and modifying equipment and spare parts in case of need.
Figure 4

Table 4 The t Test Results of VEC Pre- and Post-Tests