Stress in Education & Effects on Move to Workplace Essay

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Student Stress

The education to employment paradigm in Canada and around the world is stressful enough. However, stress really needs to be addressed and dealt with before that transition even takes place or even starts. Indeed, if students are unable to manage the stress of school, they will be ill-prepared for the work environment when they reach it. Even when comparing two different countries like the United States and Canada, the statement remains true although the manifestations and patterns will be different in those two countries or any other set of countries being compared. Given that, preparing students in advance of that transition to manage stress is the wise course of action. This report will offer the dimensions that will be analyzed, the rationale for the focus, a brief discussion of the matter from a societal/sociological perspective, a discussion of the theoretical frameworks involved and a brief annotated bibliography using a starting source list for this proposal. While some people over-exaggerate about school pressures and the ensuing effects felt when the student reaches the workplace, there are situations and people where this effect is real and long-lasting but the solutions will be different from culture to culture, between each state and/or province and from country to country.

Analysis

The overall issue at hand is management of stress in an educational environment. Indeed, stress can manifest itself in a number of life situations such as family situations, in relationships, in education and the workplace. While familial and relationship issues are no doubt important, there is a clear linkage between education and work stress and stressors that cannot really be compared to those in the family sphere. As noted in the introduction, being able to manage the student experience is important and pivotal as there will be a rough transition to the work sphere if the bad habits and coping skills in education are not shut down or at least toned down before reaching the workplace. This discussion is a bit of a misnomer as many people work and go to school at the same time. However, the parallels still exist and are readily apparent. The types and sources of stress, whatever they may be, will tend to be similar in developed countries like the United States and Canada but the prevalence and forms of these stressors will differ based on the culture and country. The United States and Canada are quite similar in many regards but very different in other ways and this report shall explore that paradigm as part of the analysis (Krieg, 2013).

For example, deadlines can be pressing in a school environment but they are typically even more pressing in a work environment. About the worst thing that can happen when something goes south in a school environment is that someone fails the assignment or fails the class. However, a mistake at work can affect lives and this pertains to both the employee as well as others left in the wake of a mistake. For example, the Target Stores employees and executives that were responsible for maintaining and securing their network obviously fell short as a lot of data was lost and people's credit was potentially affected. A person failing a class pales in comparison. However, a further dimension is that managing stress is a part of a wider discussion about competency.

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Being competent and exhibiting attention to detail in a school environment is going to be a good precursor for doing the same at a professional level. The quality of the education is obviously also a concern but so is the quality of the student, their commitment to the task, their commitment to knowing what they need to know and fixing deficiencies when they are found. When speaking of two different countries like the United States and Canada, the answers garnered will be different because there are absolute and structural differences between the educational and workplace arenas of those two countries because there are two different overall cultures involved. Some areas like the United States will strongly resemble areas of Canada but the overall trends nationwide in both countries will likely not be the same (Krieg, 2013).

Lastly, there is the societal/sociology standpoint such as the conflict perspective and the functional perspective, among others. For example, the conflict perspective states that society and life is all about competition, struggles and conflict on one or more levels. Indeed, students compete in terms of GPA, showing how smart they are and socially while workers are quite similar yet different as the stakes involved are much higher. However, there are some things (office/school politics, jockeying for favor, etc.) that are very similar. Similarly, the functional perspective talks of how systems work and how people contribute for or against the systems involved. The politics and jockeying noted above can be healthy but it can also be bad, the latter feeding into the conflict perspective (Denis & Kalekin-Fishman, 2012).

The rationale for the focus is that much like solving and addressing health/mental maladies when someone is young is much better than letting them fester for decades in terms of recovery time, adjustment methods and so forth, it is best to address problems with stress when a person is a student and before they enter the workplace. While being a server or a retail employee is generally low stress in terms of stakes and complexity, the ballgame changes a lot when speaking of things like occupational safety, millions of dollars being at stake and so forth. The research methods that will be used for this study include the use of books and journal articles as well as any other relevant scholarly resources that can inform the author of this report about how to manage stress and just how much of a problem is at hand. Indeed, the depth and breadth of the problem and the logistics involved in addressing the same are all relevant questions when it comes to this matter. Much to most of the research that will be done will focus on qualitative material but quantitative material will be used when possible and appropriate (Krieg, 2013).

Conclusion

The material and subject matter regarding stress and how it all relates to the transition from college to the workplace is voluminous and massive. There should be no problem finding the relevant material about how this dynamic manifests, how to prevent it and the implications involved. The solutions to the problems may be a little more hit and miss in terms of what really works and what is really true. However, that is the nature of scholarly research and that is why only scholarly sources will be used.

Annotated.....

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