CAREER THOUGHTS INVENTORY
Helps individuals identify, challenge, and alter negative career thoughts that interfere with effective career decision making.Purpose:
Assist in career problem solving and decision making in adults, college students, and high school students
Age Range:
Adolescent
Adult
Elder Adult
Admin:
Self-administered; Individual or group
Time:
7-15 minutes
Qualification:
B
Sample Reports:
N/A
Related Products:
Hare Psychopathy Checklist: Youth Version
Personality Assessment Inventory™The CTI is a self-administered and objectively scored assessment designed to improve the effectiveness of career counseling and guidance for adults, college students, and high school students. The CTI can be used to identify an individual who is likely to need counseling assistance; to identify the nature of an individual's career problems; and to help an individual identify, challenge, and alter negative career thoughts that interfere with effective career decision making.
Clients complete the CTI Test Booklet, responding to each of the 48 items using a 4-point rating scale (Strongly Disagree to Strongly Agree). The CTI can be completed in 7 to 15 minutes and hand-scored and profiled in about 5 minutes. The CTI yields a CTI Total score (a single global indicator of negative thinking in career problem solving and decision making) as well as scores on 3 construct scales:
- Decision Making Confusion (14 items). This scale reflects an inability to initiate or sustain the decision-making process as a result of disabling emotions and/or a lack of understanding about the decision-making process itself.
- Commitment Anxiety (10 items). This scale reflects an inability to make a commitment to a specific career choice, accompanied by generalized anxiety about the outcome of the decision-making process that perpetuates the indecision.
- External Conflict (5 items). This scale reflects an inability to balance the importance of one's own self-perceptions with the importance of input from significant others, resulting in a reluctance to assume responsibility for decision making.
The CTI was standardized on a national sample of over 1,500 adults, college students, and high school students. It has been shown to be a reliable and valid measure of negative career thinking. The scales of the CTI are internally consistent (mean a = .86 for construct scales in the standardization sample) and stable (test-retest r for the CTI Total score = .77), and the instrument exhibits reasonable content, convergent, predictive, and construct validity. The CTI Professional Manual describes test development, reliability and validity studies; guidelines for administration, scoring, and interpretation; case studies, and ideas for interventions.