Sunday, 28 June 2026

A note of subject-decomposing on positive psychology for MBA graduates’ career planning

A note of subject-decomposing on positive psychology for MBA graduates’ career planning



Highlight 8 main ideas of positive psychology, 2 main claims of it in terms of Toulmin's model of arguments, and suggest 4 practice advices on career planning for Hong Kong part-time MBA graduates.

Positive psychology is usually organized around strengths, well-being, meaning, and flourishing rather than only illness or distress. For your MBA-oriented use, I also suggest framing career planning for Hong Kong part-time MBA graduates as a practical, iterative process that fits multiple life roles, confidence, constraints, and labor-market realities.

Eight main ideas

1.    Positive emotions. Positive emotions such as joy, gratitude, hope, and contentment matter because they support well-being and help people cope and grow.

2.    Subjective well-being. A central aim is helping people evaluate life more positively in the past, present, and future.

3.    Character strengths and virtues. Positive psychology emphasizes strengths such as courage, kindness, self-control, curiosity, and wisdom.

4.    Meaning and purpose. Flourishing is not just pleasure; it also involves purpose, values, and a life that feels worthwhile.

5.    Engagement and flow. People do better when they are deeply absorbed in tasks that match their skills and challenge level.

6.    Resilience. Positive psychology studies how people recover from setbacks and build capacity to bounce back.

7.    Positive relationships. Healthy relationships are treated as a key source of happiness, support, and growth.

8.    Positive institutions. Schools, workplaces, families, and communities can be designed to support well-being and better functioning.

Two Toulmin claims

Here are two core claims of positive psychology expressed in Toulmin’s model of argument:

Toulmin element

Claim 1

Claim 2

Claim

Psychology should study not only disorder, but also strengths and flourishing

Well-being can be cultivated through practices, environments, and skills rather than treated as fixed or purely genetic

Data

Traditional psychology has focused heavily on pathology and repairing damage

Positive psychology research points to optimism, gratitude, strengths, relationships, and supportive institutions as changeable factors

Warrant

If a field wants a complete account of human functioning, it must study what makes life go well, not only what goes wrong

If well-being is influenced by habits and context, then deliberate intervention can improve it

Backing

Seligman and Csikszentmihalyi argue that psychology should build positive qualities and thriving communities

Positive psychology writings and fact sheets describe practices such as gratitude, mindfulness, and resilience-building as ways to support flourishing

Career planning advice

For Hong Kong part-time MBA graduates, a good career-planning approach is to combine self-reflection, confidence testing, and action planning across work, study, and family roles. These four practices fit the reality of adult learners in Hong Kong better than a one-time career decision.

  • Map your roles and priorities first, including employee, student, family member, and future leader, so your plan fits your actual life structure. Test career confidence by asking what roles you believe you can handle well and what outcomes you expect from each path.
  • Use positive psychology to identify strengths, energizers, and values, then choose a direction that supports meaning, competence, and engagement, not only salary.
  • Convert the choice into a 90-day plan with concrete actions such as networking, CV revision, skill upgrading, and informational interviews, then review and adjust regularly.
  • A simple example is: a part-time MBA graduate who wants to move from operations into strategy can first assess strengths, then compare two realistic job paths, then use a 90-day plan to build one missing skill and contact five target employers.


Saturday, 27 June 2026

A note on the research philosophies underpinning academic career planning theories: for MBA students

A note on the research philosophies underpinning academic career planning theories: for MBA students

 

Highlight 4 main ideas of a career planning theory mainly based on the positivist perspective, and a second one based on interpretivism, and finally, a third one based on pragmatism. Also provide a reference in Harvard reference format on each of these theories.

 

Here are three concise theory-based ways to frame career planning, each aligned with a different research philosophy: positivism, interpretivism, and pragmatism. I’ve highlighted four main ideas for each and added a Harvard-style reference you can use in your dissertation or coursework.

1) Positivist perspective

A positivist career-planning theory treats career choice as something that can be measured, predicted, and matched through objective assessment. In career guidance, this is most closely reflected in trait-factor / person-environment fit thinking, where the goal is to match a person’s traits to an occupation.

Four main ideas

  • Career choice can be understood through observable, measurable traits such as abilities, interests, and values.
  • People are assumed to have relatively stable characteristics that can be assessed objectively.
  • Better career decisions come from matching the person to the environment or job requirements.
  • Career guidance is mainly diagnostic and information-based, with the adviser acting as an expert who helps identify the “best fit.”

Harvard reference
Parsons, F. (1909) Choosing a vocation. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.

2) Interpretivist perspective

An interpretivist career-planning theory treats career as a personally constructed story shaped by lived experience, meaning, and context rather than as a fixed match. A strong example is the narrative / constructivist approach, which explains career as something people continually interpret and re-interpret through their own experiences.

Four main ideas

  • Career is understood through the individual’s subjective meanings and lived experiences.
  • People construct their career identity by telling and revising their own career stories.
  • Career decisions are influenced by context, relationships, and personal interpretation, not only by test scores or traits.
  • Guidance focuses on reflection, dialogue, and self-understanding rather than simple matching.

 

Harvard reference
Cochran, L. (1997) Career counseling: A narrative approach. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

3) Pragmatist perspective

A pragmatist career-planning theory focuses on what works in practice, especially under uncertainty and change. In career guidance, pragmatism supports flexible, action-oriented approaches such as combining ideas, trying options, learning from experience, and adjusting plans as circumstances change.

Four main ideas

  • Career planning should be judged by practical usefulness and consequences, not only by abstract theory.
  • Knowledge is provisional and should be tested through action and reflection.
  • Career decisions are often improved by experimenting, learning, and revising plans as new information appears.
  • The best approach is often a flexible blend of methods rather than loyalty to one fixed theory.

Harvard reference
Korte, R. and Mercurio, Z.A. (2017) ‘Pragmatism and Human Resource Development: Practical foundations for research, theory, and practice’, Human Resource Development Review, 16(1), pp. 113–136.

How to use this in your writing

If you are writing an MBA dissertation or assignment, you can present the three philosophies like this: positivism = matching and measurement, interpretivism = meaning and narrative, pragmatism = what works in practice. That gives you a neat conceptual structure and shows clear philosophical alignment.


** also study a note on the 5-step method of career planning for MBA graduates.


A collection of blog notes on using chatgpt for research purpose.

Friday, 26 June 2026

On a 5-step career planning method for Hong Kong part-time MBA graduates

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.


** also study a note on career planning theories and research philosophies and a second one on positive psychology for MBA graduates' career planning.


A collection of blog notes on using chatgpt for research purpose.

Thursday, 25 June 2026

Lecture note on Toulmin’s model of argument: for MBA and Housing Studies students

Lecture note on Toulmin’s model of argument: for MBA and Housing Studies students

 

Briefly describe the main components of Toulmin's model of argument, and then advice how the following MBA and Housing Studies dissertation research tasks could contribute relevant information for which of the model components: (1) literature review, (2) employment of primary and secondary research methods, (3) the inner dialogue of the student researcher, and (4) brainstorming and discussion with generative AI (such as perplexity).

Toulmin’s model breaks an argument into six parts: claim, grounds, warrant, backing, qualifier, and rebuttal. In simple terms, the claim is what you are trying to prove; grounds are the evidence; warrant is the reasoning that links evidence to the claim; backing supports that reasoning; qualifier shows how strong or limited the claim is; and rebuttal addresses counterarguments

Main components

  • Claim: the main conclusion or position you want the reader to accept.
  • Grounds: the facts, data, examples, or evidence supporting the claim.
  • Warrant: the underlying logic or assumption connecting the grounds to the claim.
  • Backing: additional support that strengthens the warrant.
  • Qualifier: language that limits certainty, such as “likely,” “probably,” or “in this context”.
  • Rebuttal: alternative views, objections, or exceptions that challenge the claim.

 

How the research tasks fit

Research task

Most relevant Toulmin component(s)

How it contributes

Literature review

Grounds, backing, warrant

It supplies prior studies and theories as evidence, and it also helps justify why your reasoning is valid.

Primary and secondary research methods

Grounds, backing, qualifier

These methods generate empirical findings and supporting evidence; they also justify the strength and limits of your claim depending on sample, context, and method.

Inner dialogue of the student researcher

Warrant, qualifier, rebuttal

Your reflective thinking helps you test the logic linking evidence to conclusions, notice uncertainty, and anticipate objections

Brainstorming and discussion with generative AI

Grounds, backing, rebuttal

AI can help generate candidate explanations, alternative perspectives, and extra supporting points, but its output should be checked and used as exploratory support rather than final evidence

Practical interpretation

For an MBA or Housing Studies dissertation, the literature review usually builds the evidential base and theoretical justification, so it mainly feeds grounds and backing. Primary and secondary research contribute the concrete evidence you will later use as grounds, while also shaping qualifiers because findings are usually context-bound. The inner dialogue is especially useful for testing warrant, because it helps you ask, “Why does this evidence support my conclusion?”. Generative AI is best treated as a brainstorming aid for rebuttals, alternative framings, and extra backing, not as a substitute for scholarly evidence.statisticssolutions+1

A useful way to draft is: “My claim is X; my grounds are Y; my warrant is Z; my backing is theory or prior studies; my qualifier is the scope of the finding; and my rebuttal is the strongest alternative explanation.”

 

Provide 3 academic references on this topic in Harvard reference format.

Here are 3 academic references in Harvard format on Toulmin’s model of argument:

1.    Toulmin, S.E. (1958) The uses of argument. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

2.    van Eemeren, F.H., Garssen, B., Krabbe, E.C.W., Snoeck Henkemans, A.F., Verheij, B. and Wagemans, J.H.M. (2013) ‘Toulmin’s model of argumentation’, in van Eemeren, F.H. and Garssen, B. (eds.) Handbook of argumentation theory. Dordrecht: Springer.

3.    Feteris, E.T. (2017) ‘Toulmin’s argumentation model’, in Argumentation Library. Cham: Springer Netherlands.



** A collection of lecture notes on the subject of research methods for MBA students, 2026 June


A collection of blog notes on using chatgpt for research purpose.