CGP Module 1
CGP Module 1
Introduction
Module 1 of Grade 11 Career Guidance Manual entitled “Road to the Right Choice”
covers different professions and life choices for Grade 11 learners. It provides
information on the different senior high school curriculum exits and regulated
professions that will facilitate their career decision making as they pursue college. This
module also tackles the different factors affecting learners’ life and career choices
considering that deciding for career and life is not an easy task for Grade 11 learners.
As facilitator of this module, you will help the learners identify these factors and
lead them to appreciate how these factors affect their choices of profession.
Note to the Teacher: Alternative or recycled materials may be used in case those
mentioned are not available.
I. Objectives
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II. Motivation (20 minutes)
Directions
1. Ask the learners to pick a sheet of colored paper from the box.
2. Group the learners according to the color of paper they picked.
Red – Academic Track
Blue – Arts and Design Track
Green – Technical Vocational and Livelihood Track
Yellow – Sports Track
3. Each group will be given a set of materials.
4. The group will design a simple costume representing the cluster of
profession/vocation assigned to their group. The group will choose a
representative who will wear the costume.
5. The group will then discuss about the track assigned to them including other
professions related to the track.
6. The representative will model the costume, introduce the track, and cite
other professions related to the track his/her group is representing.
Guide Questions
1. What did your group do to come up with the costume? with the introduction
about the track?
2. How did you feel while doing the different stages of the activity?
3. Do you see yourself in any of the clusters in the near future? Why?
Guide Questions
1. What does the story tell about?
2. According to the story, what factors affected the career choices of the
character in the story?
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3. How did these factors help the character in her choice of career?
4. As a student in senior high school, will you also consider these factors?
5. Considering these factors, do you think you will make a good choice of
career? Why?
IV. Lecturette
What or who influenced your choice of senior high school track and
strand ―was it your personal decision? your parent’s decision?
because of pressure from friends?
Personal Factors
Skills and Abilities. Are you aware of your skills and abilities? Do you know
what you are capable of doing? When individuals are in jobs best suited to their
abilities, they perform best and their productivity is highest. Parson's Trait and
Factor Theory of Occupational Choice emphasized the importance of analyzing one’s
skills, values, interests, and personality and then match these up to jobs which use
these.
Interest and Personality Types. Do you know your interests and personality
type? Holland's Career Typology established a classification system that matches
personality characteristics and personal preferences to job characteristics.
According to John Holland's theory, most people are
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experience doing it. In this way, we focus on areas in which we have had proven success
and achieved positive self-esteem.
Childhood Fantasies. “What do you want to be when you grow-up?” Perhaps this
frequently asked question during our childhood years may have helped shape what we
thought we would be then, as well as later in life.
Family Factors
“The matter of choosing a career in the Philippine setting is clearly a family affair.”
(Clemena, 2002)
Parental Influence. How many percent of your career decision is influenced by your
parents? Many children grow up idealizing the professions of their parents. Parents may
intentionally or unintentionally push their child towards a particular career path,
especially in the cases of family-owned businesses where parents expect their children
to take over the company. Still other parents apply pressure on their offspring to strive
for particular high-profile careers, feeling they are encouraging their children to reach
high. If your parents were uneducated or were always struggling to get by financially,
you may decide not to be in the same position. This may prompt you to pursue a totally
different career path―to have a stable, high-earning job. Likewise, if you have parents
who are workaholics and were never around when you were a child, you may decide to
pursue a line of work with flexibility that gives you more time with your children.
Family Beliefs and Traditions. Beliefs and traditions is another family factor to
consider when making a career choice. It is tradition for example that all male siblings
in the clan take up engineering courses. Being a family tradition, this could somehow be
relevant when making a career choise.
Social Factors
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Influence of Friends and Peers. Peer pressure is common among learners. There
are learners who decide on the career to pursue based on the opinion or choice of their
friends. Who among you will choose the same course as your friends? Why? There are
many reasons for this―you want to be in, or would not want to make new friends and
make new adjustments, too much attachment to old friends.
Industry Demands and Expectations. Our career choices take place within the
context of society and the economy. Graduates have been practical in considering the
demands and expectations of the industries before coming up with their career
decisions. These guide them in deciding what to do and where to go. Changes in the
economy and resulting job market may also affect how their careers develop.
As senior high school learners, are you aware of the different choices of professions
and career? Do you know where to go after senior high school?
The Senior High School Program has four curriculum exits. You can choose to be
employed right after graduation or pursue the development of your technical and
vocational skills. You can also decide to be an entrepreneur or pursue higher education.
For a clearer understanding, the following are the senior high school curriculum exits:
Employment
The Senior High School (SHS) program opens up employment opportunities for
graduates. SHS graduates of the Technical-Vocational-Livelihood (TVL) track may apply
for TESDA Certificates of Competency (COCs) and National Certificates (NCs).
Partnerships with different companies for technical and vocational courses expose
students to the real world of work. Students also gain work experience while studying,
and companies can even hire them after they graduate.
Entrepreneurship
With the inclusion of an entrepreneurship subject in the curriculum, SHS graduates are
better equipped for small-scale business activities, such as running the family business
or starting one’s own business.
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Higher Education
By the time you graduate from SHS, you will have the standard knowledge, skills, and
competencies needed for higher education. Also, some subjects in the College General
Education curriculum have now been integrated into the SHS curriculum. These subjects
will be taken out of the college curriculum, leaving only the subjects that are more
focused and relevant to your chosen course or major.
(Before presenting the list of regulated professions, let the students pick from the wall
the prepared strips of different professions and post these under the right cluster on the
board. After the activity, check whether the professions were properly attached to the
right cluster or not, then discuss.)
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Guide Questions
1. Given the different career and life choices through the senior high school
curriculum exits and clusters of regulated professions, were you able to decide
where to go after senior high school?
2. Did you find it helpful to know the different professions and other life choices?
3. What is the importance of considering the different factors in choosing your
profession/vocation?
4. What is your insight about this statement from Confucius?
“Choose a job you love and you will never have to work a day in your life.”
Write your insights gained from the session. Complete the following phrases.
1. I learned that
________________________________________________________________
2. I felt
________________________________________________________________
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VI. Evaluation
Activity 1.4: Knowing the Right Choice
Identify three professions/careers that you would possibly pursue, enumerate the
factors affecting your choices, and write your insights about your choices.
First Choice
Second Choice
Third Choice
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