This study researched how a population of 40 undergraduate students attending a career planning project in a private college perceived work, career and their relation with interpersonal relationships. The questionnaire revealed that most subjects perceived work positively, reported through four different perceptions of work, reported perceiving a social dimension of work, but about half of it reported that they didn't perceive people in general working in a way that showed being concerned about changing society. When the subjects listed people who worked with the same values they held, reports ranged through parents, bosses and friends; when asked about people that didn't have the same values, they listed work-mates, peers and siblings; when asked about most important people for their career, they listed their parents separately, teachers and children. Data suggested a wide participation of relationships in processing information and constructing conceptions related to work and career.
CITATION STYLE
Pereira, F. N. (2011). Perception of Work, Relationships and Career: A Study with Undergraduate Students. Interpersona: An International Journal on Personal Relationships, 5(1), 15–34. https://doi.org/10.5964/ijpr.v5i1.56
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