Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Book Review of Richard Nelson Bolles’ and Carol Christen’s What Color is Your Parachute? For Teens. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
In three pages this paper provides a review of this informative text about teen career planning. Three sources are listed in the bibliography.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGparateen.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
jobs is intense. Therefore, teens can never be too young to start thinking about choosing their career paths. Richard Nelson Bolles and Carol Christian can point teens in
the right direction in their informative and highly readable 2006 text entitled What color is your parachute? For teens. With this book, the authors are correcting an egregious oversight
on the part of public schools to focus on getting into college nearly to the exclusion of educating teens on how to conduct employment searches (Croghan, 2006). The book
emphasizes the importance of teens to evaluate thoroughly where their interests lie and to look for jobs with those in mind. Co-author (and teen counselor) Carol Christen explained her motivation
behind writing this book: "My mission is to smarten young people up... When it comes to what theyre going to do after high school, they go brain-dead" (Croghan, 2006).
In a survey Christen conducted of young adults between the ages of 18 and 28, she discovered that they knew very little of the workplace after graduating from high school,
and perhaps had they learned a bit more in the classroom, they might have made different and more satisfying career choices (Croghan, 2006). The message of the book is simple:
People who actually like their jobs and enjoy what they are doing are both happier and successful than those who are merely working to snag hefty paychecks. Bolles and
Nelson (2006) observe, "Its true that interests change with time, age, and exposure to new people, places, and experiences. But its also true that your interests now may be
with you all your life, so naming your interests is a great starting place for finding the work youll love" (p. 10). To assist teens on educating themselves about
...