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You Majored in What?: Mapping Your Path from Chaos to Career (2009)

by Katharine Brooks

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1732159,092 (3.83)None
Fully revised and updated in 2017, the revolutionary career guide for a new generation of job-seekers, from one of the U.S.'s top career counselors "So what are you going to do with your major?"   It's an innocent question that can haunt students from high school to graduate school and beyond.   Relax. Your major is just the starting point for designing a meaningful future. In this indispensable guide, Dr. Katharine Brooks shows you a creative, fun, and intelligent way to figure out what you want to do and how to get it--no matter what you studied in college. You will learn to map your experiences for insights into your strengths and passions, design possible lives, and create goals destined to take you wherever you want to go. Using techniques and ideas that have guided thousands of college students to successful careers, Dr. Brooks will teach you to outsmart and outperform your competition, with more Wisdom Builders and an easily applied career development process.   No matter what career you aspire to, You Majored in What? offers a practical, creative, and successful approach to finding your path to career fulfillment.… (more)
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"offers a practical and proven approach to uncovering overlooked oppurtunities, reframing experiences, and finding truly satisfying work, regardless of your undergraduate major or the state of the job market." This book really seems to fight the notion that your major determines your career path.
  OHIOCLDC | Jul 1, 2015 |
When some people think about chaos theory they imagine the flapping wings of a butterfly causing a hurricane in another part of the globe. Katherine Brooks posits that chaos theory can be used as a metaphor to describe career choices, and she makes a lively argument for applying chaos, and other learning theories, to career selection.

Brooks also addresses several of the myths of selecting a major or a career, such as my degree equals my earning power. The truth is, where you live, the sector you work in and job’s responsibilities are more likely to affect your earning power. Another myth is that careers are linear, which, again, isn’t always true. The development of your career can be altered by seemingly random events or deliberate changes. Moving to a new city, deciding to have a baby or going to graduate school, can send your career in a new direction. Much like John Krumboltz and Al Levin’s theory of happenstance in careers (expressed in the 2004 book: Luck Is No Accident: Making the most out of happenstance in your life and career), where chance events and unexpected opportunities can have unplanned but beneficial consequences in the future, Brooks also believes that the linear path cannot describe how careers typically unfold. Therefore, making obvious career decisions—an anthropology major will become an anthropologist—is misguided. There are many potential choices, Brooks argues, and many factors that impact careers. For example the labour market changes dynamically, with new careers rising and other careers falling.

Brooks also argues that readers shouldn’t undermine themselves when they are looking for work. “You must have absolute confidence in your degree and your ability to apply it to the marketplace if you’re going to persuade employers to hire you…one rule is required: no apologies, no regrets, no ‘if only’s,’ and no ‘I should haves’ when it comes to your education” (p.84). Since the reader can’t see the end result of all of her choices and experiences, the result is an unpredictable end, chaos theory at work, any major can lead to a serendipitous occupational discovery.
Possible occupations and areas for additional exploration are discovered on a series of Wandering Maps that the reader can take time to complete while reading the book. Each map is based on where the reader has been, as opposed to where he thinks he is headed, making his experiences count in the decision. In addition to the maps, short exercises to stimulate reflection are included at the end of each chapter.

You Majored in What? will help readers feel greater confidence in their decisions and come up with ways to articulate their decisions and experiences to employers, especially if read in addition to Hermina Ibarra’s Working Identity, or 10 Things Employers Want You to Learn in College by William Coplin.
  UofACareerCentre | Dec 4, 2014 |
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To my parents and teachers,
on whose shoulders I stand:

infinite gratitude for shaping and guiding
my work and my life.

And

to singer, songwriter, and daydream believer
John Stewart (1939-2008):

thanks for providing the soundtrack.
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Fully revised and updated in 2017, the revolutionary career guide for a new generation of job-seekers, from one of the U.S.'s top career counselors "So what are you going to do with your major?"   It's an innocent question that can haunt students from high school to graduate school and beyond.   Relax. Your major is just the starting point for designing a meaningful future. In this indispensable guide, Dr. Katharine Brooks shows you a creative, fun, and intelligent way to figure out what you want to do and how to get it--no matter what you studied in college. You will learn to map your experiences for insights into your strengths and passions, design possible lives, and create goals destined to take you wherever you want to go. Using techniques and ideas that have guided thousands of college students to successful careers, Dr. Brooks will teach you to outsmart and outperform your competition, with more Wisdom Builders and an easily applied career development process.   No matter what career you aspire to, You Majored in What? offers a practical, creative, and successful approach to finding your path to career fulfillment.

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