Scholars are exploring how students' practice, including career counseling, impacts their decisions regarding their chosen career path in Chinese secondary education. This chart provides a timeline that illustrates the evolution of career counseling, from its beginnings of catering to the labor market to its eventual establishment as an all-encompassing system of career advancement. By scrutinizing models from different global career counseling sectors and examining them at scale, particularly in the United States and European regions, this study highlights how the conventional model emphasizes the importance of enhancing participants' capacity to make independent decisions about their professional paths. However, since its examination-based educational model in China, the emphasis in China is on the grades rather than the skills they need to develop (known and foreign) in order to promote career development. According to the literature, career counseling programs face considerable variations in their execution across different educational institutions in China, despite their increasing significance over the years. Data demonstrates the requirement for highly personalized and culturally sensitive counselling interventions among students to develop their decision-making abilities for careers. Uncertainty persists regarding the prolonged effects of professional development and local variations in its application. A systematic approach to conducting research is necessary in China to enhance career counseling practices by achieving a greater balance between student academic performance and long-term career satisfaction and success..
Yi He (Mon,) studied this question.