He died before his book was published, but it invented career counseling.
Frank Parsons trained as a civil engineer at Cornell University, passed the Massachusetts bar, taught at Boston University’s law school for over a decade, and published books on currency reform, municipal ownership, and direct democracy. None of this is what he is remembered for.1
In 1908, he founded the Vocation Bureau of Boston at the Civic Service House, a settlement house serving immigrants. In its first four months, Parsons and his staff interviewed eighty young men and women between the ages of fifteen and thirty-nine.2
Parsons proposed a three-step model for vocational choice. First, develop a clear understanding of yourself, including aptitudes, interests, and limitations. Second, acquire knowledge of the requirements, conditions, and prospects in different lines of work. Third, apply reasoning to the relationship between these two sets of facts.3
He died on September 26, 1908, before the Bureau completed its first year. His manuscript, Choosing a Vocation, was published posthumously in 1909.4
Almost all of them reported that the session was among the most important hours of their lives. The three-step model Parsons described became the foundation for trait-and-factor theory, the dominant approach in career counseling for most of the twentieth century.5
The Vocation Bureau survived his death. By 1913, vocational guidance had been adopted into the Boston public school system, and the movement spread to cities across the United States. In 1913, the National Vocational Guidance Association was founded, the organization that eventually became the National Career Development Association.6
Parsons left behind the assumption that choosing a career is a problem of matching, a matter of aligning personal traits with occupational requirements. That assumption now structures standardized assessments, university career centers, and the entire profession of career counseling. He also left behind the assumption that choosing a vocation is something you do once, rationally, at a specific moment in your education.7