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Professional

A professional is a member of a profession or any person who works in a specified professional activity. The term also describes the standards of education and training that prepare members of the profession with the particular knowledge and skills necessary to perform their specific role within that profession. In addition, most professionals are subject to strict codes of conduct, enshrining rigorous ethical and moral obligations.[1] Professional standards of practice and ethics for a particular field are typically agreed upon and maintained through widely recognized professional associations, such as the IEEE.[2] Some definitions of "professional" limit this term to those professions that serve some important aspect of public interest[3] and the general good of society.[4][5]

Doctor explains x-ray to patient

In some cultures, the term is used as shorthand to describe a particular social stratum of well-educated workers who enjoy considerable work autonomy and who are commonly engaged in creative and intellectually challenging work.[6][7][8][9]

Trades edit

In narrow usage, not all expertise is considered a profession. Occupations such as skilled construction and maintenance work are more generally thought of as trades or crafts. The completion of an apprenticeship is generally associated with skilled labour, or trades such as carpenter, electrician, mason, painter, plumber and other similar occupations.

Theory edit

In his study The Rise of Professional Society historian Harold Perkin characterizes professional society; "Where pre-industrial society was based on passive property in land and industrial society on actively managed capital, professional society is based on human capital created by education and enhanced by strategies of closure, that is, the exclusion of the unqualified." Specifically, it is the management of human capital, and not just specialized skill which Perkin argues is a mark of the professional classes, at one point going so far as to compare it to a modern form of feudalism.[10]

Although professional training appears to be ideologically neutral, it may be biased towards those with higher class backgrounds and a formal education. In his 2000 book, Disciplined Minds: A Critical Look at Salaried Professionals and the Soul-Battering System that Shapes Their Lives, Jeff Schmidt observes that qualified professionals are less creative and diverse in their opinions and habits than non-professionals, which he attributes to the subtle indoctrination and filtering which accompanies the process of professional training. His evidence is both qualitative and quantitative, including professional examinations, industry statistics and personal accounts of trainees and professionals.[11]

A key theoretical dispute arises from the observation that established professions (e.g. lawyers, medical doctors, architects, accountants, civil engineers, surveyors) are subject to strict codes of conduct. Some have thus argued that these codes of conduct, agreed upon and maintained through widely recognized professional associations, are a key element of what constitutes any profession.[12] Others have argued that strict codes of conduct and the professional associations that maintain them are merely a consequence of 'successful' professionalization, rather than an intrinsic element of the definition of professional (ism); this implies that a profession arises from the alignment between a shared purpose (connected to a 'greater good'), a body of knowledge, actual behavior in terms of actions and decisions, and expectations held by societal stakeholders.[13]

Etymology edit

The etymology and historical meaning of the term professional is from Middle English, from profes, adjective, having professed one's vows, from Anglo-French, from Late Latin professus, from Latin, past participle of profitēri to profess, confess, from pro- before + fatēri to acknowledge; in other senses, from Latin professus, past participle. Thus, as people became more and more specialized in their trade, they began to 'profess' their skill to others, and 'vow' to perform their trade to the highest known standard. With a reputation to uphold, trusted workers of a society who have a specific trade are considered professionals. Ironically, the usage of the word 'profess' declined from the late 1800s to the 1950s, just as the term 'professional' was gaining popularity from 1900 to 2010.[14][15] Notably, in American English the rise in popularity of the term 'professional' started at the beginning of the 20th century[16] whereas in British English it started in the 1930s and grew fastest in the 1960s and 1970s.[17]

Guilds and licensing practices edit

The notion of a professional can be traced to medieval European guilds, most of which died off by the middle of the nineteenth century, the exception being the scholars guild, or university.[18]

With most guilds formally abolished outside of the realm of academia, establishing exclusivity and standards in a trade (i.e. the successful professionalization of a trade) had to be achieved via other means such as licensing practices, of which might begin as an informal process established by voluntary professional associations, but then eventually become law due to lobbying efforts. Paralleling or soon after the fall of guilds professional associations began to form in Britain and the US. In the US a number of interested parties sought to emulate the model of apprenticeship which European guilds of the Middle Ages had honed to achieve their ends of establishing exclusivity in trades[19] as well as the English concept of a gentleman which had come to be associated with higher income and craftsmanship.[18][20] Examples are the Lazzaroni who lobbied to create the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and professional associations who lobbied to create the American Medical Association (AMA). According to Miller et al., "Lazzaroni opposed reforms for no apparent reason other than that they were proposed by scientists outside of their tight knit group.".[21] In his seminal work The Transformation of American Medicine (1982) Paul Starr argues that a significant motivation in the development of the AMA was to gain authority over unlicensed practitioners so as to minimize competition among medical practitioners, thereby enhancing the earning power and prestige of medical professionals.[22] The licensing process Starr argues, was unnecessarily prolonged and the costs were artificially enhanced with the specific aim of deterring potential practitioners from entering the field. In his book, The Early Development of Medical Licensing Laws in the United States, 1875–1900, Ronald Hamowy wrote:

"The American Medical Association (AMA) was established as a permanent national organization at Philadelphia in 1847 at a convention attended by some 230 delegates representing more than forty medical societies and twenty-eight schools. From its inception, one of its primary aims was the upgrading of medical education and a concomitant reduction in the number of physicians. Its committee on raising medical standards reported at its first meeting that "the large number of Medical Colleges throughout the country, and the facility with which the degree is obtained, have exerted a most pernicious influence" on the profession. With the object of ameliorating this situation, recommendations were carried calling for a specified minimum preliminary education as a prerequisite for admission to a medical college, a lengthening of the period of study for graduation from a medical school, including compulsory clinical instruction at a hospital prior to the issuance of a diploma, and professional participation in some licensing scheme for physicians. Indeed, so important was the issue of education considered by the AMA that one of its first acts was the establishment of a Committee on Medical Education..."

As technology progressed throughout the twentieth century, the successful professionalization of a given field was increasingly made possible through the idea of specialization.[10][22]

As was the case with guilds who claimed to establish exclusivity in a trade in the name of serving the public good, there are often subtle dichotomies present in the idea professionalizing a field, whether in the name of serving some notion of the public good or as a result of specialization. For example, while defenders of guilds have argued that they allowed markets to function by ensuring quality standards, Sheilagh Ogilvie has instead argued that markets of the Middle Ages flourished when guilds were abolished and that there is much evidence to support the notion that individuals prefer a wide variety of products of varying quality and price to being granted protections which they did not ask for, and which artificially constrain consumer options.[19] With regard to modern forms of professional specialization, does specialization which accompanies advances in technology naturally result in exclusivity, or have our licensing systems and laws been artificially engineered with the intention of limiting the number of individuals who reach the point of specialization?

In certain cases the want to specialize can have adverse and bias effects on an industry. In his seminal work From Poor Law to Welfare State: A History of Social Welfare in America (1994) Walter Trattner argues that social workers began to emphasize individualized casework at the expense of alternative methods which utilize holistic methods to address social issues.[23]

The granting of degrees through universities in many cases serves as one major component of licensing practices, but there are numerous legal stipulations and in some cases even informal social norms which also act in this capacity. Nevertheless, the university system constitutes one of the last remaining widely spread guild (or quasi-guild) and continues to serve as an indispensable means for the professionalization of fields of work. While it is true that most guilds disappeared by the middle of the nineteenth century, the scholars guild persisted due to its peripheral standing in an industrialized economy. In the words of Elliot Krause, "The university and scholars' guilds held onto their power over membership, training, and workplace because early capitalism was not interested in it...".[18]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Postema, Gerald J. (1980). "Moral responsibility in professional ethics". N.Y.U. L. Rev. 55. Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  2. ^ . IEEE.ORG. Archived from the original on 15 May 2015. Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  3. ^ Harvey, L.; Mason, S.; Ward, R. (1995). Role of Professional Bodies in Higher Education Quality Monitoring. Birmingham: Quality in Higher Education Project. ISBN 1-85920-108-3.
  4. ^ Sullivan, William M. (2nd ed. 2005). Work and Integrity: The Crisis and Promise of Professionalism in America. Jossey Bass.
  5. ^ Gardner, Howard and Shulman, Lee S., The Professions in America Today: Crucial but Fragile. Daedalus, Summer 2005. (pgs. 13–14)
  6. ^ Gilbert, D. (1998). The American class structure: In an age of growing inequality. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Press.
  7. ^ Beeghley, L. (2004). The structure of social stratification in the United States. Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
  8. ^ Eichar, D. (1989). Occupation and Class Consciousness in America. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-26111-4
  9. ^ Ehrenreich, B. (1989). Fear of falling: The inner life of the middle class. New York: Harper Perennial.
  10. ^ a b Perkin, Harold (1989). The Rise of Professional Society; England Since 1885. Routledge Inc.
  11. ^ Schmidt, J. (2000). Disciplined Minds – A Critical Look at Salaried Professionals and the Soul-Battering System that Shapes their Lives. Rowman & Littlefield, pp.293.
  12. ^ Barker, Richard (July 1, 2010). "The Big Idea: No, Management Is Not a Profession". Harvard Business Review (July–August 2010). Retrieved 16 October 2019 – via hbr.org.
  13. ^ Romme, G. (2016). The Quest for Professionalism: The Case of Management and Entrepreneurship. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Oxford University Press. 28 January 2016. ISBN 978-0-19-873773-5. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  14. ^ "Simple Definition of profess". merriam-webster.com. Merriam Webster. 2015. Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  15. ^ "Google Books NGram Viewer". books.google.com/ngrams. 2018. Retrieved 14 November 2018.
  16. ^ "Google Books NGram Viewer (American English)". books.google.com/ngrams. 2018. Retrieved 14 November 2018.
  17. ^ "Google Books NGram Viewer (British English)". books.google.com/ngrams. 2018. Retrieved 14 November 2018.
  18. ^ a b c Krause, Elliot (1996). Death of Guilds: Professions, States, and The Advance of Capitalism, 1930 to The Present. Yale University Press, New Haven and London.
  19. ^ a b Ogilvie, Sheilagh (2019). The European Guilds: An Economic Analysis. Princeton University Press.
  20. ^ Perkin, Harold (1993). The Rise of Professional Society. Routledge, London and New York.
  21. ^ Miller, Lillian (1972). The Lazzaroni: Science and Scientists in The Mid Nineteenth Century America. Smithsonian Institution Press.
  22. ^ a b Starr, Paul (1982). The Social Transformation of American Medicine: The Rise of a Sovereign Profession and the Making of a Vast Industry. Basic Books, Inc., New York.
  23. ^ Trattner, Walter (1994). From Poor Law to Welfare State: A History of Social Welfare in America, 5th Edition. The Free Press.

External links edit

  •   Media related to People by occupation at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Quotations related to Professional at Wikiquote

professional, other, uses, disambiguation, professional, member, profession, person, works, specified, professional, activity, term, also, describes, standards, education, training, that, prepare, members, profession, with, particular, knowledge, skills, neces. For other uses see Professional disambiguation A professional is a member of a profession or any person who works in a specified professional activity The term also describes the standards of education and training that prepare members of the profession with the particular knowledge and skills necessary to perform their specific role within that profession In addition most professionals are subject to strict codes of conduct enshrining rigorous ethical and moral obligations 1 Professional standards of practice and ethics for a particular field are typically agreed upon and maintained through widely recognized professional associations such as the IEEE 2 Some definitions of professional limit this term to those professions that serve some important aspect of public interest 3 and the general good of society 4 5 Doctor explains x ray to patientIn some cultures the term is used as shorthand to describe a particular social stratum of well educated workers who enjoy considerable work autonomy and who are commonly engaged in creative and intellectually challenging work 6 7 8 9 Contents 1 Trades 2 Theory 3 Etymology 4 Guilds and licensing practices 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksTrades editIn narrow usage not all expertise is considered a profession Occupations such as skilled construction and maintenance work are more generally thought of as trades or crafts The completion of an apprenticeship is generally associated with skilled labour or trades such as carpenter electrician mason painter plumber and other similar occupations Theory editIn his study The Rise of Professional Society historian Harold Perkin characterizes professional society Where pre industrial society was based on passive property in land and industrial society on actively managed capital professional society is based on human capital created by education and enhanced by strategies of closure that is the exclusion of the unqualified Specifically it is the management of human capital and not just specialized skill which Perkin argues is a mark of the professional classes at one point going so far as to compare it to a modern form of feudalism 10 Although professional training appears to be ideologically neutral it may be biased towards those with higher class backgrounds and a formal education In his 2000 book Disciplined Minds A Critical Look at Salaried Professionals and the Soul Battering System that Shapes Their Lives Jeff Schmidt observes that qualified professionals are less creative and diverse in their opinions and habits than non professionals which he attributes to the subtle indoctrination and filtering which accompanies the process of professional training His evidence is both qualitative and quantitative including professional examinations industry statistics and personal accounts of trainees and professionals 11 A key theoretical dispute arises from the observation that established professions e g lawyers medical doctors architects accountants civil engineers surveyors are subject to strict codes of conduct Some have thus argued that these codes of conduct agreed upon and maintained through widely recognized professional associations are a key element of what constitutes any profession 12 Others have argued that strict codes of conduct and the professional associations that maintain them are merely a consequence of successful professionalization rather than an intrinsic element of the definition of professional ism this implies that a profession arises from the alignment between a shared purpose connected to a greater good a body of knowledge actual behavior in terms of actions and decisions and expectations held by societal stakeholders 13 Etymology editThe etymology and historical meaning of the term professional is from Middle English from profes adjective having professed one s vows from Anglo French from Late Latin professus from Latin past participle of profiteri to profess confess from pro before fateri to acknowledge in other senses from Latin professus past participle Thus as people became more and more specialized in their trade they began to profess their skill to others and vow to perform their trade to the highest known standard With a reputation to uphold trusted workers of a society who have a specific trade are considered professionals Ironically the usage of the word profess declined from the late 1800s to the 1950s just as the term professional was gaining popularity from 1900 to 2010 14 15 Notably in American English the rise in popularity of the term professional started at the beginning of the 20th century 16 whereas in British English it started in the 1930s and grew fastest in the 1960s and 1970s 17 Guilds and licensing practices editThe notion of a professional can be traced to medieval European guilds most of which died off by the middle of the nineteenth century the exception being the scholars guild or university 18 With most guilds formally abolished outside of the realm of academia establishing exclusivity and standards in a trade i e the successful professionalization of a trade had to be achieved via other means such as licensing practices of which might begin as an informal process established by voluntary professional associations but then eventually become law due to lobbying efforts Paralleling or soon after the fall of guilds professional associations began to form in Britain and the US In the US a number of interested parties sought to emulate the model of apprenticeship which European guilds of the Middle Ages had honed to achieve their ends of establishing exclusivity in trades 19 as well as the English concept of a gentleman which had come to be associated with higher income and craftsmanship 18 20 Examples are the Lazzaroni who lobbied to create the American Association for the Advancement of Science AAAS and professional associations who lobbied to create the American Medical Association AMA According to Miller et al Lazzaroni opposed reforms for no apparent reason other than that they were proposed by scientists outside of their tight knit group 21 In his seminal work The Transformation of American Medicine 1982 Paul Starr argues that a significant motivation in the development of the AMA was to gain authority over unlicensed practitioners so as to minimize competition among medical practitioners thereby enhancing the earning power and prestige of medical professionals 22 The licensing process Starr argues was unnecessarily prolonged and the costs were artificially enhanced with the specific aim of deterring potential practitioners from entering the field In his book The Early Development of Medical Licensing Laws in the United States 1875 1900 Ronald Hamowy wrote The American Medical Association AMA was established as a permanent national organization at Philadelphia in 1847 at a convention attended by some 230 delegates representing more than forty medical societies and twenty eight schools From its inception one of its primary aims was the upgrading of medical education and a concomitant reduction in the number of physicians Its committee on raising medical standards reported at its first meeting that the large number of Medical Colleges throughout the country and the facility with which the degree is obtained have exerted a most pernicious influence on the profession With the object of ameliorating this situation recommendations were carried calling for a specified minimum preliminary education as a prerequisite for admission to a medical college a lengthening of the period of study for graduation from a medical school including compulsory clinical instruction at a hospital prior to the issuance of a diploma and professional participation in some licensing scheme for physicians Indeed so important was the issue of education considered by the AMA that one of its first acts was the establishment of a Committee on Medical Education As technology progressed throughout the twentieth century the successful professionalization of a given field was increasingly made possible through the idea of specialization 10 22 As was the case with guilds who claimed to establish exclusivity in a trade in the name of serving the public good there are often subtle dichotomies present in the idea professionalizing a field whether in the name of serving some notion of the public good or as a result of specialization For example while defenders of guilds have argued that they allowed markets to function by ensuring quality standards Sheilagh Ogilvie has instead argued that markets of the Middle Ages flourished when guilds were abolished and that there is much evidence to support the notion that individuals prefer a wide variety of products of varying quality and price to being granted protections which they did not ask for and which artificially constrain consumer options 19 With regard to modern forms of professional specialization does specialization which accompanies advances in technology naturally result in exclusivity or have our licensing systems and laws been artificially engineered with the intention of limiting the number of individuals who reach the point of specialization In certain cases the want to specialize can have adverse and bias effects on an industry In his seminal work From Poor Law to Welfare State A History of Social Welfare in America 1994 Walter Trattner argues that social workers began to emphasize individualized casework at the expense of alternative methods which utilize holistic methods to address social issues 23 The granting of degrees through universities in many cases serves as one major component of licensing practices but there are numerous legal stipulations and in some cases even informal social norms which also act in this capacity Nevertheless the university system constitutes one of the last remaining widely spread guild or quasi guild and continues to serve as an indispensable means for the professionalization of fields of work While it is true that most guilds disappeared by the middle of the nineteenth century the scholars guild persisted due to its peripheral standing in an industrialized economy In the words of Elliot Krause The university and scholars guilds held onto their power over membership training and workplace because early capitalism was not interested in it 18 See also editAmateur Centre for the Study of Professions Organizational culture Professional boundaries Professional services Professional sports Semi professionalReferences edit Postema Gerald J 1980 Moral responsibility in professional ethics N Y U L Rev 55 Retrieved 26 March 2016 IEEE org Index Page IEEE ORG Archived from the original on 15 May 2015 Retrieved 26 March 2016 Harvey L Mason S Ward R 1995 Role of Professional Bodies in Higher Education Quality Monitoring Birmingham Quality in Higher Education Project ISBN 1 85920 108 3 Sullivan William M 2nd ed 2005 Work and Integrity The Crisis and Promise of Professionalism in America Jossey Bass Gardner Howard and Shulman Lee S The Professions in America Today Crucial but Fragile Daedalus Summer 2005 pgs 13 14 Gilbert D 1998 The American class structure In an age of growing inequality Belmont CA Wadsworth Press Beeghley L 2004 The structure of social stratification in the United States Boston Allyn amp Bacon Eichar D 1989 Occupation and Class Consciousness in America Westport CT Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 26111 4 Ehrenreich B 1989 Fear of falling The inner life of the middle class New York Harper Perennial a b Perkin Harold 1989 The Rise of Professional Society England Since 1885 Routledge Inc Schmidt J 2000 Disciplined Minds A Critical Look at Salaried Professionals and the Soul Battering System that Shapes their Lives Rowman amp Littlefield pp 293 Barker Richard July 1 2010 The Big Idea No Management Is Not a Profession Harvard Business Review July August 2010 Retrieved 16 October 2019 via hbr org Romme G 2016 The Quest for Professionalism The Case of Management and Entrepreneurship Oxford Oxford University Press Oxford University Press 28 January 2016 ISBN 978 0 19 873773 5 Retrieved 16 October 2019 Simple Definition of profess merriam webster com Merriam Webster 2015 Retrieved 26 March 2016 Google Books NGram Viewer books google com ngrams 2018 Retrieved 14 November 2018 Google Books NGram Viewer American English books google com ngrams 2018 Retrieved 14 November 2018 Google Books NGram Viewer British English books google com ngrams 2018 Retrieved 14 November 2018 a b c Krause Elliot 1996 Death of Guilds Professions States and The Advance of Capitalism 1930 to The Present Yale University Press New Haven and London a b Ogilvie Sheilagh 2019 The European Guilds An Economic Analysis Princeton University Press Perkin Harold 1993 The Rise of Professional Society Routledge London and New York Miller Lillian 1972 The Lazzaroni Science and Scientists in The Mid Nineteenth Century America Smithsonian Institution Press a b Starr Paul 1982 The Social Transformation of American Medicine The Rise of a Sovereign Profession and the Making of a Vast Industry Basic Books Inc New York Trattner Walter 1994 From Poor Law to Welfare State A History of Social Welfare in America 5th Edition The Free Press External links edit nbsp Media related to People by occupation at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Quotations related to Professional at Wikiquote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Professional amp oldid 1184590948, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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