A groundbreaking study from Hiroshima University has shed new light on the psychological challenges faced by university graduates as they transition into the workforce. Commonly known as “reality shock,” this phenomenon describes the distress that arises when the expectations of new working life collide with its actual demands and conditions. Such a mismatch often leads to negative emotional states like anxiety, depression, and confusion, which in turn can jeopardize job retention and professional development among new employees.
The research team, led by Professor Makiko Kodama of Hiroshima University’s Graduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences, embarked on a comprehensive exploration of how pre-employment career resilience contributes to managing reality shock. Career resilience, a multifaceted construct, encompasses various personal attributes such as coping skills, social competence, openness to novelty, and, significantly, optimism about the future. The study probed whether these traits, especially when cultivated before entering the workforce, can enhance an individual’s ability to adapt to early career challenges.
Beyond assessing career resilience, the research also highlighted the role of job crafting—a concept involving deliberate modifications to work tasks or relationships—as a proactive coping mechanism. Job crafting allows employees to reshape their work environment and duties to better align with their strengths, interests, and identity, ultimately fostering a deeper vocational commitment. The study examined whether new workers with higher career resilience are more inclined to engage in job crafting when confronted with reality shock, leading to stronger vocational identity formation.
The investigation unfolded through a longitudinal approach consisting of three survey phases. The initial survey gauged career resilience and vocational identity prior to employment, providing a baseline for each participant. The following survey, administered after workforce entry, measured job crafting behaviors, current career resilience, vocational identity, and the experience of reality shock. Finally, a third survey focused on individuals who reported reality shock, aiming to identify the specific types of job crafting activities that effectively supported their vocational identity development.
From an initial pool, valid data were collected from 133 respondents for the first two surveys, comprising 36 men and 97 women with an average age of 22. The third survey included 27 participants, containing 8 men and 19 women. Despite the study’s moderate sample size, the detailed data enabled robust statistical analyses to decipher the complex relationships among career resilience, job crafting, reality shock, and vocational identity.
Contrary to common assumptions, the study revealed no overall difference in the level of pre-employment career resilience between those who experienced reality shock and those who did not. This surprising finding challenges the notion that general career resilience alone can shield new employees from the psychological difficulties of workplace entry. Instead, the deeper analytical focus pinpointed optimism about the future—a specific component of career resilience—as a crucial factor.
Optimism about the future emerged as a pivotal trait enabling individuals to navigate reality shock more effectively through cognitive job crafting strategies. These strategies involve mental and perceptual re-framing of work roles and tasks to derive greater personal meaning and alignment with vocational goals. Participants exhibiting higher optimism engaged in more adaptive cognitive crafting, which strengthened their vocational identity despite facing workplace disillusionment.
Professor Kodama elaborated on these insights, explaining that optimism functions not merely as a positive outlook but as an active psychological resource. “Individuals with pronounced future-oriented optimism are better equipped to reinterpret and mentally reconstruct their job roles in ways that foster growth and satisfaction, even in the face of unexpected challenges,” she said. This finding underscores the potential of optimism to act as a catalyst for professional development rather than a passive trait.
The implications of this research are profound for both educational institutions and employers. It points to the necessity of integrating career resilience-building programs, with a strong emphasis on cultivating optimism and job crafting skills, into university curricula before students enter the job market. By preparing graduates psychologically and behaviorally, such initiatives could mitigate the disruptive effects of reality shock and reduce early career turnover.
Moreover, the research offers a pathway for organizational support systems aimed at nurturing vocational identity formation among new hires. Employers might consider developing onboarding practices that encourage job crafting and foster optimistic mindsets, thereby enhancing resilience and engagement among young professionals. This dual focus on individual traits and proactive coping behaviors could revolutionize early-career employee retention strategies.
In an era marked by volatile job markets and rapid workplace transformations, understanding the psychological underpinnings of career adaptation is more critical than ever. This Hiroshima University study provides empirical evidence that optimism and adaptive job crafting serve as resilience-enhancing mechanisms, enabling new workers to transform adversity into vocational growth. Such insights deepen our grasp of the interplay between personality, behavior, and professional identity development in the earliest career stages.
Ultimately, this research champions a proactive stance on career challenges rather than resignation to burnout or job mismatch. It advocates for cultivating mental flexibility and positive future orientation well before workforce entry, equipping individuals with the tools to shape their professional lives actively. Such an approach holds promise for healthier, more fulfilling early career experiences and sustainable workforce engagement.
As we look forward, this study invites further inquiries into how educational systems and workplaces can design interventions that foster optimism and job crafting on a wider scale. It also prompts reflections on the role of psychological resilience traits in diverse cultural and occupational contexts, offering a rich vein of exploration for scholars and practitioners alike.
For university students, employers, and policymakers seeking to bridge the gap between educational preparation and workplace realities, the Hiroshima University study offers an evidence-based roadmap. Its nuanced findings illuminate how specific psychological assets, rather than broad resilience alone, drive meaningful vocational identity formation amid the inevitable challenges of starting a career.
Subject of Research: People
Article Title: Role of Career Resilience Before Employment and Job Crafting for New Employees’ Vocational Identity Formation When Facing Reality Shock
News Publication Date: 16-Dec-2025
Web References:
https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440251370972
References:
Kodama, M. (2025). Role of Career Resilience Before Employment and Job Crafting for New Employees’ Vocational Identity Formation When Facing Reality Shock. SAGE Open. https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440251370972
Keywords: career resilience, reality shock, job crafting, vocational identity, optimism, early career adaptation, psychological resilience, workforce entry

