DETERMINANTS OF CAREER CHOICE AMONG SECONDARY SCHOOL STUDENTS IN NIGERIA
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2.1     CONCEPT OF CAREER
			  Choosing a career is not  like choosing an orange from a basket. According to Weiler (1997) “Successful  career seldom happen by chance” with very few exception, people who really get  what they want in a career do so because they define their objective plans and  schedules for achieving their objectives, and assume personal responsibility  for implementing and following these plans.
			  These people monitor their  progress regularly, improve their plans when they are not getting the desired  result and persevere in the face of frequent set back until objectives are  achieved.
			  Many  scholars have given their own different meaning to choice and career and some  have further stressed their importance and objectives of selecting a better  career.
			  The  dictionary meaning of Career is a way of making a living profession amongst  career of opportunities.
			  Many  find it difficult to make choice in the sense that they lack guidance and  counseling, making their choice without the help of any person. Several works  have been done based on the determinant factors affecting career by students. 
			  There  are opinions expressed on this issue that are as varied as the factor which  have been included in the first chapter. In the same view, there is no doubt  however that there are many factors responsible for the progress of a child  backwardness or retardation VIZ; genetic factors (that are inherent in the  child himself) and environmental factor (from the environment where the child  grew up). 
2.2     NEED FOR PARENTS’ GUIDANCE 
			  Michael  (2001) stated that the home provides many things for the child, like protection,  guidance, shelter and encouragement. Again the home tries by all means to  educate the child with the outside world by interpreting what is happening to /  around him. He went further to say that the child as he/she is not yet informed  of the factors and realities of life but with the help of the parents he will  be very much aware of the tracks or steps to follow if he is to be useful in  life. 
			  He  still maintains that the homes are marked by the persistent conflicts and  divergent aims between the parents and the child who seldom gain a sense of  family of unity and hence his personal security is much more precarious. This  child feels poor about the background and fumbles.
			  “The inability of some parents and guidance to  provide good background and show interest in the education of their children  has a vital role to play in the performance of some learners”
			  Unless the necessary  materials are provided for the learners, all efforts made towards his/her  improvement will not work out effectively. The child without learning materials  would certainly loose his sense of direction. The influence of parents has been  one of the strongest and the most persistent factor that determine the child  attitude towards studying different school subjects and hence his choice of  career.
2.3     STUDENTS’ ABILITY AND INTEREST
			  Shertzer and Stone (2003)  discovered that the element of interest and ability are the basic factor  influencing students in their choice of subject in the General Certificate of  Education Examination and Eventual choice. According to them, lack of interest  can always lead to low efficiency. Developing interest in a subject goes a long  way to enhance a very high performance in any examination as a result, a good  choice will help one achieve the necessary goals in one`s chosen subject and  career.
			  Mitchell  (2003) noted that the problem of career choice to be compounded by the present  state of the country; inadequate professional or qualified teachers in our  secondary schools to offer career guidance to the students for the child, the  school should plan the subject that will lead him to a job in which there would  be job satisfaction.
			  Nwagu  (2003) Discovered that there are many reasons why majority of students drop out  of institution of learning. These are due to wrong choice of subject, lack of  interest, lack of formulated goals and financial constraints and some other  variables.
			  He also noted that the  guidance and counseling services in many institutions also controls the  students in their choice of subject for the General Certificate of Education.
			  Okoh (2005) believed that  the 6-3-3-4 system of education in Nigeria today is a situation whereby any  student who fails to pass the final examination in the junior secondary school  will be forced to drop out of school to learn vocational trade which may not be  in the interest of such student.
			  Peter  M. Blau et al (2001) says that occupational choice is a developmental process  that extended over many years. According to them there is no single time at  which young people decide upon one out of all possible career but, there are  many cross roads at which their lives take decisive turns which narrow the  range of further alternatives and this influence the ultimate choice of  occupation.
			  In other words, one`s chosen career ought to suit his/her  occupational development. For   people to  achieve these goals, going to work may have fun and pursuing their personal  values for those who fail to evolve their career feel trapped and frustrated at  work.
			  Career  choice therefore, implies answering questions like, what do I want, how do I go  about getting what I want; The first step in career choice therefore, is being  able to recognize what one wants. This is often determined by one`s value  interest. The second step is reaching out for what one`s personal desire is and  this is seldom realized without conscious efforts. On his part, one has to do  something to happen the way he wants them happen.
			  In  a similar development, Okeke (2003) held the motion that school subjects  relevantly chosen when making a career choice and rationally balanced and  studied with definite aims by any student/child at the appropriate moments  could form a major factor for funding individual solution. He concluded that  the school subjects shape the future choice of career and of those who pass  through the paths of learning. Students should be adequately guided to choose  subjects that will allow them achieve the prime objectives of education.
			  In  Nigeria, we have catchment area with zoning and quota system. This give restriction  on admission to some indigence of some areas, determining the industries to be  sited. Rationalization of education/subjects courses in Delta state college of  education affects students choice of career.
			  It is obvious that some  states are richer than others and have better facilities and job opportunities  that are readily available. Whether one comes from a zone with better education  or job opportunities or not, will affect the type of education one can get and  how far one might achieve it. The type of job the person may eventually get at  the end, hence excluding him from education opportunities might lead to his  exclusion from potentially meaningful jobs and this affects his choice of  career.
			  Consequently,  there is the influence of extended family system of polygamy or of large  families of one religion (Christianity, Islamic or Traditional) on the choice  of career.
			  These  cultural bias  make children for less  individualistic and less prone to making independent life time decisions on  choosing a career compared to their counterparts in the western countries.  Although, there is the assumption that children of high income families attend  good colleges and universities for studies while those of low income earners  aspire to own business that would grow to highest level.
			  Most  illiterate parents in Nigeria are interested in getting their children to make  up for what they lamentably missed and that is good education for high status  and well paid jobs after graduation.
			  This  is because they are expected to provide sense of life achievement for their old  parents (i.e. secure some form of social insurance for parents,) take care of  their younger one`s and be source of pride in their local community.
			  Investigation on the  factors influencing student`s choice of science subjects for the general  certificate of education was carried out by Ayozie (2005). His study was done in  Anambra state. In his findings, he came out in finding the factors with  decreasing order of magnitude as follows;
			  Intellectual ability and  achievement
- Occupational preferences, interests, needs and value.
 - Influence from teachers.
 - Influence from parents and relations.
 - Influence from peer group and friends.
 
Julie (2004) in his research found out that about  eighty percent (80%) of students in Akwa wish to further their education. while  20%  will want to go and find jobs. In her  findings Medicine, Engineering, social science and Nursing are the most popular  courses among those who which to further their education. She then observed  that lack of adequate knowledge of the subjects relevant to the courses is  common among majority of the students who want to further their education.
			  Abin (2001) studied “the pattern of academic  aspiration of Nigerian adolescent and found out that many adolescent choose different  profession without proper consideration of their individual abilities”
			  His investigation also shows that age and sex has  substantial effects on the largely unrealistic choice of academic and  occupational pursuit. This agrees with the findings of Olayinka (1999),who  found out that youths were enticed to choose subject simply because it has a  high financial benefit or large measure of prestige attached to it. He also  noted that many females were making in road into certain fields that were  formally regarded as man`s domain such as Engineering, Medicine, and Geology.
2.4     THE NEED FOR GUIDANCE AND COUNSELING UNITS IN SCHOOLS
			  Oboniye (2009) conducted a study on job aspiration of  youths and educational provision, using 173 youths comprising of 96 boys and 77  girls within the ages of sixteen (16) and eighteen (18) years in secondary  schools in Enugu State and came out with the observation that most of the  student choose jobs without relating them to their interest and capability to  cope with the nature/demand of the job. He therefore concluded that this was so  because of the lack of proper guidance and counseling units in schools.  Guidance and counseling units should be provided in schools to guide the youths  in their job aspirations and in their selection of relevant school subjects  rather than leaving them to rely on their parents, relations and friends for  information. It is obvious that wrong choice of subject lead to having misfits  in job and this deprives the nation of her real manpower needs. It is known  that some parents influence the choice of career of their children. They force  them to what they would not be able to do e.g. medicine, law, Engineering etc,  on the other hand    make them take after them so as to protect  the family name.