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Sigma
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Testing
Your Resolve
Happy New Year! The year ahead is sure to be one full of exciting
changes. Are you ready for it? The best resolution you can make
this year is to be prepared-particularly when it comes to the
next step you take professionally. What comes after graduation?
Are you going to graduate school? Taking time off to travel
or volunteer? Securing that first "real world" job?
Whatever path you take, it's best to combine the celebration
of the New Year with a reflection on your life and where it's
headed.
How will your personality, skills, interests and values dictate
what comes next? One way to find out is to take a skills inventory
test. There are dozens of great resources
that will help you discern how to mesh your passions with your
abilities. (Take a trip to your campus's career counseling center
for more detailed information.)
One of the most popular skills inventory tests is the Myer-Briggs
Type Indicator or MBTI. Based on Jungian psychology,
the MBTI was created by a mother-daughter team, and helps individuals
like you and me discover things we may not have realized about
ourselves otherwise. Click here
for an abridged version of the Myer-Briggs and start learning
more about yourself now!
Don't be surprised when the results of your test are revealed.
Assessment tools like the MBTI can be brutally honest. My personal
results, for example, show that I tend to be a big picture thinker
who makes logic-based decisions. Not bad. However, the instrument
also indicates that because of my pragmatism, others might find
me insensitive and dispassionate at times. Ouch! That knowledge,
however, might help me relate to friends and coworkers better
in the future. Good to know.
Skills inventory tests like the MBTI are only as useful as you
make them. Take time to review your results carefully. Ask close
friends and family if they agree with your final assessment.
Decide what advanced areas of study or career paths go well
with your particular profile and act on that knowledge.
This awkward time in our lives has been referred to as the Quarterlife
Crisis for good reason. We are deciding who it is
we want to become. This New Year, resolve to make that decision
a well-informed one. |
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Want
to know more?
If you're interested in learning more
about self discovery, here are a couple books I've read
and would recommend:
What
Should I Do With My Life?
by Po Bronson (C'mon now, this book was
featured on Oprah!)
Road
Trip Nation
by Nathan Gebhard, et al (a fun, quick read
about a couple college guys who take an RV through uncharted
territory) |
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