Page 167 - Keys to College Success
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RISK                           ACTION
                         RISK ACTION




               FOR  COLLEGE,  CAREER,  AND  LIFE  REWARDS












                                       KNOW IT            WRITE IT          WORK IT




                        Complete the following on paper or in digital format.



                        KNOW IT Think Critically


                        Make an Important Decision

                        Build basic skills.  List the steps of the decision-making process.
                        Take it to the next level.  Think about how you would put the decision-making process to
                        work on something that matters to you. Write an important long-term goal that you have, and
                        define the decision that will help you fulfill it. Example: “My goal is to become a nurse. My
                          decision: What to specialize in.”
                        Move toward mastery.  Use the empty flowchart (Key 5.15) to apply the decision-making
                          process to your goal. Follow the steps below.
       5                 ■  Examine needs and concerns.  What are your needs, and how do your values come into play?
       CHAPTER             What is most needed in the health market, and how can you fulfill that need? What  roadblocks

                           might be involved? List what you come up with in the “Analyze problem/ decision” section.
                           For example, the prospective nurse might list needs like: “I need to feel that I’m helping
                           people. I intend to help with the shortage of perinatal or geriatric nurses. I need to make
                           a good living.”
                         ■  Generate options.  Ask questions to imagine what’s possible. Where might you work? What
                           might be the schedule and pace? Who might work with you? What would you see, smell, and
                           hear on your job? What would you do every day? Make a separate list of all of the options
                           you know of. The prospective nurse, for example, might list perinatal surgery, neonatal inten-
                           sive care unit, geriatric nursing in a hospital or in a retirement community, and so forth.
                         ■  Evaluate options.  Think about how well your options will fulfill your needs. Select three
                           options to analyze. Write potential positive and negative effects (pros and cons) of each.
                         ■  Imagine acting on your decision.  Choose one practical course of action, based on your think-
                           ing so far, that you might follow. List the specific steps you would take. For example, the pro-
                           spective nurse might list actions that help him determine what type of nursing suits him best,
                           such as interning, summer jobs, academic goals, and talking to working nurses. If you eventu-
                           ally act on this choice, you can fill in actual positive and negative effects in the flowchart, as
                           well as a final evaluation.




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