Skip to main content

Home/ Career Development/ Group items tagged psychology

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Leslie Camacho

Dissatisfaction Among Psychology Majors - WSJ.com - 0 views

  •  
    "Psychology majors might want to put themselves on the couch. Only 26% of psychology majors are "satisfied" or "very satisfied" with their career paths, the lowest in a sampling of popular majors included in a Wall Street Journal study. The psychology majors the survey captured had a satisfaction rate 14 percentage points lower than the next lowest majors, economics and environmental engineering."
Corporate Chess

Office Politics, Leadership & Toxic Work Environments - 0 views

  •  
    The Underlying Psychology Of Office Politics
Leslie Camacho

Does Busier Job Equal Happier Marriage? - The Juggle - WSJ - 0 views

  •  
    Can working hard at the office invigorate a marriage? A new study suggests that for working mothers at least, that may be the case. Working moms tend to be happier with their marriages when they are shouldering heavy workloads on the job, says a four-year study of 169 couples published recently in the Journal of Family Psychology. One reason may be that when working moms' workloads increase, their husbands tend to help out more at home, researchers suggest.
Leslie Camacho

Busy, Powerful or Just Plain Rude? - The Juggle - WSJ - 0 views

  •  
    Do you think rude people appear more authoritative at work and tend to get ahead faster than polite colleagues? According to research from the University of Amsterdam published in the latest "Social Psychological and Personality Science," they do.
Leslie Camacho

Amid Calls for Change, College Majors Seem Fixed - Curriculum - The Chronicle of Higher... - 0 views

  •  
    According to lore, the academic terms "major" and "minor" first appeared in 1877, in a Johns Hopkins University course catalog. By the middle of the 20th century, the specialized major had become standard practice at almost every American college. Sophomore year: Agonized conversations with parents, and then the declaration of a major. Junior and senior years: Upper-level course work. Graduation day: A diploma that certified your skills in psychology, or physics, or, as the old joke goes, underwater basket weaving.
Leslie Camacho

What Won't You Do for a Job? - WSJ.com - 0 views

  •  
    Melissa & Doug LLC, a fast-growing toy maker in Wilton, Conn., puts applicants through an interview process so grueling that one job seeker says she left in tears and felt psychologically traumatized.
Leslie Camacho

What Won't You Do for a Job? - WSJ.com - 0 views

  •  
    Melissa & Doug LLC, a fast-growing toy maker in Wilton, Conn., puts applicants through an interview process so grueling that one job seeker says she left in tears and felt psychologically traumatized.
Leslie Camacho

Stressed Out? Slack Off - The Juggle - WSJ - 0 views

  •  
    "Are slackers more adept at handling work-life stress than type-A go-getters? A new study finds that may be the case. Those who cope with work-family conflict by becoming busier and looking for more resources to solve problems - type-A multitaskers - actually experience more stress and strain, says the study in the Journal of Applied Psychology. The researchers studied 193 people who were all combining work and college studies with family duties."
Leslie Camacho

How to turn your kids into entrepreneurs - WSJ.com - 0 views

  •  
    How do you get kids ready to become entrepreneurs? Journal Report Read the complete Small Business report. The classic answer, of course, is the lemonade stand: Encourage your kids to start a homespun business instead of just bugging you for money. But entrepreneurs and educators say the real solution goes much deeper than that. There are crucial psychological traits an entrepreneur needs to succeed, they say, and parents should help kids develop them at every opportunity. Here's a look at those attributes-and how to foster them.
Leslie Camacho

Knowing How -- And When -- To Quit - WSJ.com - 1 views

  •  
    "A few years ago I was - like some of you reading this - overextended, overworked, and deeply unhappy about it. I was a young psychology professor desperately seeking tenure, with two toddlers at home and a husband whose work kept him away for days at a time. I exercised once a week on a good week, rarely saw my friends or extended family, and couldn't remember the last time I'd read a book that wasn't about statistics. It was just too much. Something had to give. And it did. I left my job, not knowing exactly what I was going to do next. It was the toughest decision I've ever made, but it was also one of the best."
Corporate Chess

How to Deal With Insults and Put-Downs | Psychology Today - 0 views

  •  
    We need never take offense at an insult. Offense exists not in the insult but in our reaction to it, and our reactions are completely within our control. It is unreasonable to expect a boor to be anything but a boor; if we take offense at his bad behaviour, we have only ourselves to blame.
1 - 12 of 12
Showing 20 items per page