CHARACTERISTICS OF A PROFESSION
CHARACTERISTICS OF A PROFESSION
1. Professions are occupationally related social
institutions established and maintained as a means of providing essential
services to the individual and society.
2. Each profession is concerned with an identified area
of need or function (for example, maintenance of physical and emotional health,
preservation of rights and freedom, enhancing the opportunity to learn).
3. The profession collectively, and the professional
individually, possess a body of knowledge and a repertoire of behaviors and
skills (professional culture) needed in the practice of the profession; such
knowledge, behavior, and skills normally are not possessed by the
nonprofessional.
4. Members of the profession are involved in decision-making in the service of the client. These decisions are made in accordance
with the most valid knowledge available, against a background of principles and
theories, and within the context of the possible impact on other related conditions
or decisions.
5. The profession is based on one or more undergirding
disciplines from which it builds its own applied knowledge and skills.
6. The profession is organized into one or more
professional associations, which, within broad limits of social accountability,
are granted autonomy in control of the actual work of the profession and the
conditions that surround it (admissions, educational standards, examination and
licensing, career line, ethical and performance standards, professional
discipline).
7. The profession has agreed-upon performance standards
for admission to the profession and for continuance within it.
8. Preparation for and induction into the profession is
provided through a protracted preparation program, usually in a professional
school on a college or university campus.
9. There is a high level of public trust and confidence
in the profession and in individual practitioners, based upon the profession's
demonstrated capacity to provide service markedly beyond that which would
otherwise be available.
10. Individual practitioners are characterized by a
strong service motivation and lifetime commitment to competence.
11. Authority to practice in any individual case derives
from the client or the employing organization; accountability for the
competence of professional practice within the particular case is to the
profession itself.
12. There is relative freedom from direct on-the-job
supervision and from direct public evaluation of the individual practitioner.
The professional accepts responsibility in the name of his or her profession
and is accountable through his or her profession to the society.
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