On a 5-step career planning method for Hong Kong part-time MBA graduates
As a part-time MBA lecturer, I am interested in the
research theme of "career planning for Hong Kong part-time MBA
graduates". Could you suggest two relevant academic theories on career
planning, highlighting 4 main ideas of each of these two theories, as well as
providing 1 academic reference on each of these two theories in Harvard
reference format?
Two strong theories for studying career planning for Hong Kong
part-time MBA graduates are Super’s Career Development Theory and Social
Cognitive Career Theory (SCCT). Both are widely used in career research,
and both fit a topic where graduates are balancing work, study, family roles,
and future career moves.
1) Super’s Career Development
Theory
This theory is useful because it treats career planning as a lifelong
process rather than a one-time choice, and it explicitly recognizes
that people hold multiple life roles at the same time. For part-time MBA
graduates, that is especially relevant because they often combine the roles of
employee, student, parent, and caregiver.
Four main ideas
· Career development is lifelong and unfolds across stages such as growth, exploration, establishment, maintenance, and decline.
· People occupy multiple roles simultaneously, and career choices are shaped by the balance among these roles.
· Career decisions are influenced by both personal factors and situational conditions such as health, finances, family responsibilities, and social context.
· Career adaptability becomes important in adulthood because adults often need to adjust plans as work and life circumstances change.
Harvard reference
Super, D.E. (1980) A life-span, life-space approach to career
development. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 16(3), pp. 282–298.
2) Social Cognitive Career
Theory (SCCT)
SCCT is a strong fit for your topic because it explains how people form
career plans through the interaction of self-efficacy, outcome
expectations, interests, goals, and environmental supports/barriers. This
is particularly useful for understanding why some MBA graduates become more
confident and goal-directed after postgraduate study, while others remain
constrained by workplace or family barriers.
Four main ideas
· Self-efficacy: people are more likely to pursue career goals when they believe they can succeed.
· Outcome expectations: people’s career choices depend on what they believe will happen if they take a certain path.
· Interests and goals develop through learning experiences and shape what careers people consider and pursue.
· Supports and barriers in the social and cultural environment affect career choice, persistence, and progress.
Harvard reference
Lent, R.W., Brown, S.D. and Hackett, G. (1994) Toward a unifying social
cognitive theory of career and academic interest, choice, and
performance. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 45(1), pp. 79–122.
Why these two fit your topic
Super’s theory helps you frame career planning as role balancing
across the life course, which suits part-time MBA graduates in Hong Kong
very well. SCCT helps you examine how confidence, expectations, and
constraints shape actual career intentions and actions, which is ideal if
your dissertation wants to explain differences in post-MBA career planning.
A practical way to combine them is to use Super for the broad
life-course framing and SCCT for the psychological mechanisms behind career
planning decisions.
Please based on these 2 career planning theories, as well
considering the following key words (i.e. positive psychology, inner dialogue,
and collaboration with generative AI) to come up with a 5-step career planning
method for the Hong Kong part-time MBA graduates.
Here is a practical 5-step career planning method
for Hong Kong part-time MBA graduates that combines Super’s career development theory,
SCCT, and your three
keywords: positive psychology, inner
dialogue, and collaboration with generative AI. The method is
designed to fit the reality of working adults in Hong Kong who must balance
career growth, study, and personal responsibilities.
5-step method
1)
Role and strengths scan
Start by mapping your current
life roles, such as employee, MBA student, family member, and future leader,
because Super’s theory emphasizes that career planning happens across multiple
life roles. At the same time, identify your strengths, achievements, and
energizing experiences, using positive psychology to focus on what you do well
rather than only on gaps. A short inner dialogue prompt can help: “What roles
matter most now, and where have I already performed well?”
2)
Career confidence check
Use SCCT to assess your
self-efficacy and outcome expectations: “What career moves do I believe I can
succeed in, and what results do I expect from them?”. This step helps you
distinguish between goals you truly want and goals you avoid because of fear, uncertainty,
or past setbacks. Generative AI can support this stage by helping you turn your
experience into a structured career profile or by suggesting possible career
paths based on your background, but it should not replace your own judgment.
3)
Positive future design
Define a preferred future career
direction in a positive, concrete way, such as a role, industry, or progression
path you want over the next 1–3 years. Positive psychology is useful here
because it encourages building goals around meaning, competence, and engagement
rather than only salary or status. Inner dialogue can be used to test the fit
of each option: “Does this path match my values, strengths, and life stage?”
4)
AI-supported option testing
Use generative AI as a thinking
partner to compare options, draft scenarios, and surface risks, opportunities,
and skill gaps. This step fits SCCT because environmental supports and barriers
matter, so AI can help you examine market trends, job descriptions, and likely
transition barriers in Hong Kong. A useful workflow is: ask AI for three
possible career paths, then evaluate each against your confidence, family/work
constraints, and long-term goals.
5)
Action and review loop
Convert the chosen path into a
90-day action plan with clear actions such as networking, updating your CV,
completing a course, or arranging informational interviews. Super’s theory
supports ongoing adjustment, so this is not a one-off decision but a cycle of
planning, acting, and revising. Review progress regularly through inner
dialogue and AI-assisted reflection: “What improved, what blocked progress, and
what should I change next?”
How the
theory fits
Super’s theory gives the life-span, life-space
foundation, so the method respects multiple roles and changing life stages.
SCCT adds the mechanism for explaining how confidence, expected outcomes,
supports, and barriers shape career choice and persistence. Positive psychology
strengthens motivation, inner dialogue supports self-reflection, and generative
AI provides structured support for exploration and decision-making.
A
dissertation-ready framing
You could present this as a human-AI assisted career planning model
for part-time MBA graduates in Hong Kong. The model would argue that career
planning is most effective when graduates combine self-awareness, confidence
testing, future visualization, external labor-market scanning, and iterative
action review. This makes the method suitable for both academic discussion and
practical MBA career development programming.
A collection of blog notes on using chatgpt for research purpose.