Life Satisfaction among Midlife Career Changers: A Study of Military Members Transitioning to Teaching

The study explored factors related to life satisfaction for military members transitioning to teaching. Schlossbergâ s (1981) model of human adaptation to transition was used to articulate the career transition factors of readiness, confidence, control, perceived support, and decision independence....

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Main Author: Robertson, Heather C.
Other Authors: Counselor Education and Supervision
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27686
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05122010-100341/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-276862020-09-26T05:33:48Z Life Satisfaction among Midlife Career Changers: A Study of Military Members Transitioning to Teaching Robertson, Heather C. Counselor Education and Supervision Brott, Pamelia E. Day-Vines, Norma L. Ulrich, Lorene B. Belli, Gabriella M. Life Satisfaction Career Transition Troops to Teachers The study explored factors related to life satisfaction for military members transitioning to teaching. Schlossbergâ s (1981) model of human adaptation to transition was used to articulate the career transition factors of readiness, confidence, control, perceived support, and decision independence. The Career Transitions Inventory (Heppner, 1992), Satisfaction with Life Scale (Deiner, 1985), demographic variables, and open-ended questions were used to examine relationships. The data were collected using a secure online survey with a total of 136 usable responses from the Troops to Teachers database. Participants were overwhelmingly male (86%), married (86%), white (79%), and not of Hispanic origin (87%), which were reflective of an earlier Troops to Teachers study (Feistrizer, 2005). A weak correlation was found with life satisfaction and the variables of confidence and control. Stepwise regression revealed that combined control and readiness accounted for approximately 16% of the variance in life satisfaction. Additional relationships were noted between time in transition and income, as well as time in transition and support. Generally, participants were satisfied with life, which may indicate successful adaptation post-military transition. Results supported earlier studies demonstrating that internal/psychological factors (i.e., confidence, readiness, control) are positively linked to successful career transition. However, results did not mirror research on external factors (i.e., support) being related to successful career transition. Participantsâ insights indicated that preparing for, investing in, and having a positive attitude might benefit others pursuing a mid-life career transition. Further, helping and serving others, recognizing their accomplishments, and finding work/life balance reflected satisfaction in both military and teaching careers. Limitations of the study included low response rates, lack of diversity among the respondents, and findings not generalizable to other populations. Implications for counseling individuals in mid-life military career transitions are to (a) incorporate confidence and control as counseling foci, (b) address social/family and financial supports during transitions, and (c) draw from previous meaningful experiences (i.e., military) to deal with transition. Future research with populations that fully encapsulate stages of transition and are representative of more diversity can further contribute to our understanding of mid-life career transition. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:11:58Z 2014-03-14T20:11:58Z 2010-05-04 2010-05-12 2010-06-04 2010-06-04 Dissertation etd-05122010-100341 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27686 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05122010-100341/ Robertson_HC_D_2010.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Life Satisfaction
Career Transition
Troops to Teachers
spellingShingle Life Satisfaction
Career Transition
Troops to Teachers
Robertson, Heather C.
Life Satisfaction among Midlife Career Changers: A Study of Military Members Transitioning to Teaching
description The study explored factors related to life satisfaction for military members transitioning to teaching. Schlossbergâ s (1981) model of human adaptation to transition was used to articulate the career transition factors of readiness, confidence, control, perceived support, and decision independence. The Career Transitions Inventory (Heppner, 1992), Satisfaction with Life Scale (Deiner, 1985), demographic variables, and open-ended questions were used to examine relationships. The data were collected using a secure online survey with a total of 136 usable responses from the Troops to Teachers database. Participants were overwhelmingly male (86%), married (86%), white (79%), and not of Hispanic origin (87%), which were reflective of an earlier Troops to Teachers study (Feistrizer, 2005). A weak correlation was found with life satisfaction and the variables of confidence and control. Stepwise regression revealed that combined control and readiness accounted for approximately 16% of the variance in life satisfaction. Additional relationships were noted between time in transition and income, as well as time in transition and support. Generally, participants were satisfied with life, which may indicate successful adaptation post-military transition. Results supported earlier studies demonstrating that internal/psychological factors (i.e., confidence, readiness, control) are positively linked to successful career transition. However, results did not mirror research on external factors (i.e., support) being related to successful career transition. Participantsâ insights indicated that preparing for, investing in, and having a positive attitude might benefit others pursuing a mid-life career transition. Further, helping and serving others, recognizing their accomplishments, and finding work/life balance reflected satisfaction in both military and teaching careers. Limitations of the study included low response rates, lack of diversity among the respondents, and findings not generalizable to other populations. Implications for counseling individuals in mid-life military career transitions are to (a) incorporate confidence and control as counseling foci, (b) address social/family and financial supports during transitions, and (c) draw from previous meaningful experiences (i.e., military) to deal with transition. Future research with populations that fully encapsulate stages of transition and are representative of more diversity can further contribute to our understanding of mid-life career transition. === Ph. D.
author2 Counselor Education and Supervision
author_facet Counselor Education and Supervision
Robertson, Heather C.
author Robertson, Heather C.
author_sort Robertson, Heather C.
title Life Satisfaction among Midlife Career Changers: A Study of Military Members Transitioning to Teaching
title_short Life Satisfaction among Midlife Career Changers: A Study of Military Members Transitioning to Teaching
title_full Life Satisfaction among Midlife Career Changers: A Study of Military Members Transitioning to Teaching
title_fullStr Life Satisfaction among Midlife Career Changers: A Study of Military Members Transitioning to Teaching
title_full_unstemmed Life Satisfaction among Midlife Career Changers: A Study of Military Members Transitioning to Teaching
title_sort life satisfaction among midlife career changers: a study of military members transitioning to teaching
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27686
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05122010-100341/
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