Talk:Profession/Archive 1

Latest comment: 1 year ago by 120.89.104.45 in topic Occupation
Archive 1

Cooking as a profession

Cooking is a profession, i.e. chefs, restaurant management, dietetics, nutritionists, etc.

Many people make their living cooking for others. The Occupational Outlook (http://www.bls.gov/oco/ocos024.htm) for chefs, restaurant mangers, dieteticians, and nutritionists is fairly good, with "as fast as the average" growth. Some college is often required for success in this field. There are trade schools, universities, and professional organizations that support this profession.

Some organizations that support professionals who cook for others include:

The American Dietetic Association http://www.eatright.org/

Chef2Chef Culinary Portal http://chef2chef.net/rank/inter.shtml

The Cooking Club of America http://visitors.cookingclub.com/

New York Association of Cooking Teachers http://www.nyact-online.org/index.html

Finding schools and programs:

My Career Education: Culinary Arts !! (http://www.mycareeredu.com/cschls.html) is a guide to many of the culinary schools in the U.S.

Some good books on this topic are:

Beal, Eileen. Choosing a career in the restaurant industry. New York: Rosen Pub. Group, 1997.

Institute for Research. Careers and jobs in the restaurant business: jobs, management, ownership. Chicago: The Institute, 1977.

Original entry by: Teri Ross Embrey, Automation Coordinator, Chicago Library System

Speaking as a former chef and waitor I can say that it is one of the most stressful and under-paid jobs around. Certinally good for those who have a strong passion. However I would say that a minority of chefs have this passion.


This could be a page of its own instead of a /Talk page. --RjLesch


I agree chefs are highly skilled and work very hard. However, the art of cooking in it's self would fall into a skilled trade. One who runs a restaurant would be considered an entrepreneur or a merchant.

Prostitution

Perhaps that sentence on prositution should be moved elsewhere in the article referencing the modern merging of the concepts of profession and occupation/work. ~ Dpr 27 Feb 2005

Need for a definition

Much of this talk page seems to be taken up with people arguing that their employment counts as a profession. Wouldn't it be better to have a strict definition that proposals could be judged against so it is possible to say that trade X is a profession while trade Y is not?

Alternatively replace the whole article with a brief note stating that profession is synonymous with skilled employment which seems to be the current direction.

I am *not* attacking the skills and importance of the proposed professions, I'm not even saying they wouldn't fit under a definition just that there needs to be some way to state what is or isn't a profession, which seems to be absent at present.

Seems to me profession should mean teaching but is usually a euphemism for licentiate trade, a licentiate being one who is licensed to profit from trade of some form of service
Laurel Bush (talk) 13:08, 15 January 2010 (UTC)

Improvement Drive

Sysop has been nominated to be improved by Wikipedia:This week's improvement drive. Vote for this article to support it.--Fenice 06:56, 11 August 2005 (UTC)

Home economics as a profession

I deleted this section from the article; it was originally added in May 2005. Here's the diff from the article history. My concern is that it was added to the article by a contributor with an IP (no user account, or not logged in) as a full block of text, and reads as if it is probably a verbatim quote of the handout referenced at the bottom on the section. I suspect a copyright violation, though I have not obtained the reference to confirm this possibility. I am also concerned that the tone of this section is not neutral, since it seems to be advocating steps to be taken so that home economics could be recognized as a profession. Mamawrites 11:03, 23 November 2005 (UTC)

Here's what I deleted:


Here are the main characteristics of any profession, with reference to home economics (human ecology, family and consumer sciences) as an example of a profession:

  • A profession provides a set of services that are beneficial to society as a whole, a social end. Home economics holds the challenging reality that layman think they can provide services for individuals and families since everyone lives day-to-day in some form of home environment. A profession recognizes this and builds its practice on human ethics and concerns, not just technical how-to practice
  • The set of services provided for the benefit of society involves intellectual activity, especially moral judgements, which require that the professional continually engage in scholarly activity focused on the critique of existing knowledge and how it matches the evolving needs of individuals and families in today's environment
  • Education for the profession (study) is vigorously supervised to ensure that those practising in the field are prepared to engage in morally defensible work. Entrance into the practice of the profession is thoroughly screened through a process of licensing or certification to ensure morally defensible work
  • Because of the level of competence and independent, intellectual thought required to practice in a profession, the scope and purpose of the profession is necessarily limited but not the complexity of knowledge and practice in the profession. Most significantly, even though the field may have to generate specializations in order to deal with the scope of the profession, all off shoots will adhere to the same, agreed to, social end (see first bullet) — that is what makes the profession holistic and sustainable.
  • The knowledge in most professions is unique. The knowledge appropriate to home economics is not unique. What is unique is that the field pays attention to the problems that families encounter from one generation to another (perennial problems) and then draws information and insights from a number of disciplines and, after critically examining them, organizes these into knowledge that has practical use for the social end of the profession, currently the well-being and quality of daily life for individuals and families.
  • To be a profession, home economics must engage in self reflection and self critique so that it can present itself to the public in such a way that society is clear about what we offer. Otherwise the field runs the risk of not asking the appropriate questions, posing the wrong problems, missing the underlying causes of symptoms that families are trying to cope with and, thereby, engaging in unprofessional practice and unethical conduct. To prevent this disastrous circumstance, pre-service and in-service initiatives must respect the "spirit of inquiry" and facilitate constant attempts to improve and refine theory and practice. As a true profession and professional, we must critique the human condition, which means investigating and denouncing social and individual damages caused by power imbalances in society. We will strive for praxis; that is, remain concerned with real inequality in society and then seek to link the insights gained from our ongoing critique to engage in social and political action.

Brown, M., & Paoulucci, B. (1978). Home Economics: A Definition [Mimeographed]. Alexandria, VA: American Association of Family and Consumer Sciences. http://www.aafcs.org


If anyone wants to work with this as a source material and extract ideas from it to add back into the section on common qualities of professions, I can see that it might be worthwhile to do so. Mamawrites 11:03, 23 November 2005 (UTC)

Need a seperate article on Professionalism

I was dissapointed to be redirected to this Professions article when I typed Professionalism in the search box.

Professionalism is a sort of philosophy and practice. From what I dimly remember at university, it consists in a set of ethics or code of conduct common to all professions: eg. treating all clients equally, acting selflessly, putting aside your own personal interests, being always polite etc. It also has a body of knowledge which people outside the profession do not have.

I think professionalism is very important - if everyone behaved with professionalism, then the world would be a far better and happier place.

There was at least one book published about professionalism along these lines in the UK, perhaps in the 1960s or 1970s.

Did you read the article? It has a lot of what you're talking about in it. It seems to me that "professionalism" in your sense is pretty much implicit in the definition of "profession."
I teach engineers about what it means to be a member of a profession, and the ethical and technical responsibilities that entails--I think that meshes somewhat with what you're describing--and I find this article reasonably useful. It could always be improved, though. I think that would be a good way to go--either by adding depth to what's there or adding a section on professionalism per se. If the material grows to an unwieldy size, the article can always be split into two. · rodii · 15:06, 17 May 2006 (UTC)
I did read the article. It is, if I may say so, a mixed-up jumble of information about Professions and Professionalism. These would be far more effective if they were teased out and split into two seperate articles. Even non-professionals can and ideally should adhere to professionalism in their lives. People do need to be taught (either explicitly or by role-model) how to behave professionaly. Without professionalism, the world would be a very corrupt and evil place. An element I should have added to my previous comment was that it includes altruism and conscientiousness; and now I recall that one of the most important things in professionalism is thinking-about-what-you-are-doing, or 'reflection'.

references

Authors to consider in this area incldue Parkin, Perkin, Witz, Savage, Freidson, Larkin and Evetts 142.167.246.253 10:58, 23 March 2007 (UTC)

Professional bodies

Hi there, I don't think it is true that all professions require regulation and membership of professional organisations. I'm a scientist and there are no professional bodies or statutory regulations in my profession. Indeed, in theory you are not required to gain a PhD to become a scientist, although this qualification is in practice pretty much universal. The closest we come to professional bodies are organisations such as the Royal Society and United States National Academy of Sciences, but these are more honorary than usual. Tim Vickers 17:37, 24 July 2007 (UTC)

Technically you may be correct, as regulation and membership are only two characteristics of a profession listed in the article. However, they are two key elements of professional work when it comes to earnings because they give rise to:

  • the existence of a “labor market shelter” by which the profession is shielded from competition; and
  • the retention of professional control (as opposed to client state control) over judging and evaluating professional work.[1]

These two elments enable professionals who are regulated and hold membership of professional organisations, such as doctors and lawyers, to earn substantially more from their work than with those who do not, such as scientists and university professors who are paid relatively less. Whether this is should be the case is an issue this article address.

  1. ^ Reiter, Sara: Professions and Finance, Binghamton University (2002)
All professions do require regulation and membership. Unfortunately, you are using "profession" in the vernacular, meaning you have advanced knowledge of the field in which you work. Science is almost always an occupation, not a profession (the exceptions being medicine, pharmacy, etc., and engineering and certain other disciplines depending on where you live). The word "profession" is technically a state/province-regulated term that can only be applied to specific groups of people. These days, people call these "regulated professions" to allow for the vernacular definition of profession, but this is VERY recent. I'm pulling this straight out of exam notes, but I'll be hunting down the reference so I can post this information in the article. P.S. I realise this is an old conversation, but I am updating it here as this is a common misunderstanding.Skittleys (talk) 05:37, 10 July 2008 (UTC)

Possible Employment project/subproject

There is now a proposed WikiProject or subproject to deal with wikipedia's content relating to employment, including the articles on the various professions and jobs, at Wikipedia:WikiProject Council/Proposals#Employment. Any interested parties should indicate as much there. Thank you. John Carter (talk) 14:08, 13 March 2008 (UTC)

Conspire gainst Society

I heard a quote that all professions ultimately conspire against the society within which they operate. If confirmation/citation was known inclusion may be worthy. 79.72.248.113 (talk) 00:53, 24 June 2008 (UTC)


Some time ago I noted the following quote, which I believe may well be the one to which you refer. "People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise prices" It is from Adam Smith "Wealth of Nations". Lancastrianexile (talk) 14:25, 14 August 2008 (UTC)

Update: the reference is Adam Smith "An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations" [1775] Book 1, Chapter X, Part II (page 105 in the version I accessed). Lancastrianexile (talk) 14:49, 14 August 2008 (UTC)

No, I think you mean this:

"SIR PATRICK. And a very good profession, too, my lad. When you know as much as I know of the ignorance and superstition of the patients, youll wonder that we're half as good as we are.

RIDGEON. We're not a profession: we're a conspiracy.

SIR PATRICK. All professions are conspiracies against the laity. And we cant all be geniuses like you. Every fool can get ill; but every fool cant be a good doctor: there are not enough good ones to go round." G B Shaw, The Doctor's Dilemma, Act 1 Peter morrell 15:41, 14 August 2008 (UTC)


I suspect we are both 'right' and it is debateable which of us is referring to the same thing that the original contributor had in mind. I will just say that Adam Smith came first and I suspect but can't prove that GBS had the character in the play (mis)quote him. Lancastrianexile (talk) 16:14, 16 January 2009 (UTC)

New references required

While this article certainly is thorough, it is in need of more recent references. What first caught my attention was the "male-dominated" characteristic. While it is arguable that, in today's society, the top positions within the profession are male-dominated, the profession itself is not. Of course, being confused, I clicked the reference link...and discovered this book was from 1992. In today's evolving world, characteristics like this can't be defined by references that are 16 years old. I don't have time to go on my own reference hunt at the moment, so if someone else would like to do this research, that would be wonderful! In the meantime, I have put an {{outdated}} tag up—I felt this was more appropriate than the {{update}} tag as I am not 100% certain the information IS out of date—and have placed some {{old fact}} and {{Updateneeded}} inline tags around as appropriate. Skittleys (talk) 05:11, 10 July 2008 (UTC)

Clarify vernacular vs. historical definition

This article is jumping back and forth between the common use of the term "profession" and the one that was accepted until the past few decades. Historically, the term "profession" is restricted to certain groups of people, as listed in the article. Yet, the intro defines it as "an occupation, vocation or career where specialized knowledge of a subject, field, or science is applied." That is the vernacular definition. This needs to be clarified somehow...but it does bring the factual accuracy of the article into question. — Skittleys (talk) 05:49, 10 July 2008 (UTC)

Historical definition

Two points re main article:

1. There is no mention anywhere of the origin of the word (and concept) of profession: L., "to swear (an oath)". This is an unfortunate omission. It helps toward clarification of what properly is and what is not a profession - a distinction that has become murky, if not altogether lost, in current common usage.

The oath referred to dictates adherence to ethical standards, which invariably include practitioner/client confidentiality, truthfulness, and the striving to be expert in one's calling, all three of these being practiced above all for the benefit of the client. There is also a stipulation about upholding the good name of the profession. This has been perversely cited as a rationale for protecting incompetent or unethical members, but it is in fact quite the opposite, to make sure that such practitioners never enter the ranks of the profession, or are punished and/or removed from it as their behaviour is discovered.

2. The article states that there were classically three professions (medicine, the clergy, and the law), but I was always taught that there were four, the fourth being the military. The oath for the military contains the same criteria as the others, keeping in mind that the "client" for the military is a government or leader.

(Unfortunately I have been unable to find anything like a definitive reference to support the second point above, and the results of my search of the internet have been equivocal.) Gbdoc (talk) 09:47, 27 August 2008 (UTC)

I entirely agree with all your points. For me, please feel free to go ahead and add this material to the article. I don't see any objections to that. thanks Peter morrell 10:01, 27 August 2008 (UTC)

In reference to point #2 above, US Army Field Manual (FM) 1, "The Army" dated June 2005 identifies the military as one of the four professions on page 1-10. The exact verbiage is as follows

To fulfill those societal needs, professions--such as, medicine, law, the clergy, and the military--develop and maintain distinct bodies of specialized knowledge and impart expertise through formal, theoretical, and practical education.

Might also be worth mentioning that in many jurisdictions professional do not enjoy limitation of liability which further distinguishes those listed from other occupations. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 99.226.96.75 (talk) 02:38, 15 July 2010 (UTC)

Hopefully this helps.

Marcus 209.22.11.219 (talk) 16:18, 17 November 2008 (UTC)

10 Characteristics of a profession - Male Dominated?

How can you put something like that in an article with only one example citation and consider it NPOV? If not already, male domination of certain professions, per se, is well on its way out. In 2007 women comprised 63% of students enrolled in professional pharmaceutical programs and 51.3% of PhD candidates in that same field.[1] Women comprised 47.3% of entering law students in 2007 and have comprised as much as 49.4% of law students at the turn of the decade.[2] None of those figures speak to domination.

I'm not a Wikipedia memeber so I'll leave it alone, but allowing these beliefs to persits on weak evidence, when hard numbers are available, is ridiculous. This is not 7th grade social studies here, let's get real. --24.128.25.245 (talk) 13:28, 28 August 2008 (UTC)

Thanks for that view of US situation, just because entry numbers are shifting that way, does not mean the professions are no longer male dominated because they are. Look at the numbers of practitioners and you see a different story PLUS salaries for women are STILL only 75% at best those of men...plus the 'big wheels' and top jobs in all professions are STILL held by men. Overwhelmingly that is still so. So a range of factors are needed before the kind of change you suggest can be made, but your info can certainly be added to the article. Peter morrell 14:36, 28 August 2008 (UTC)

have tried to add some of this to restore balance Peter morrell 15:26, 28 August 2008 (UTC)

I made the edit on Oct. 1 that you reverted. The reason I removed the stuff that I did is that it relates to economy-wide gender gaps - note that it specifically refers to all full-time workers. You are more interested in stuff on gender gaps within occupations. There is certainly a literature on this, but what you are citing is not particularly relevant. You might, for example, cite Sasser (2004) or Joan Williams's 2000 book Unbending Gender. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.56.73.31 (talk) 16:57, 5 October 2008 (UTC)

Is economics a profession?

I'm not sure if this is the best place to ask...

But... is an economist a professional by definition?

220.238.34.112 (talk) —Preceding undated comment was added at 10:16, 15 December 2008 (UTC).

NPOV Issue

Take a look at this paragraph: "Although in Britain, "the fulltime gender pay gap has shrunk in the past 30 years, it is still 17%, while for part-time work it is stuck at a shameful 40%....all this is happening when, at school and college, women are outshining men. In the medical and legal professions there has been a 'genderquake,'"[19] which means these professions are gradually becoming female-dominated. Yet their pay continues to lag behind that of their male colleagues." Now, I don't know how to fix it, but it is filled with facts. However, the tone is definitely not NPOV. This paragraph needs a lot of cleaning up. Contributions/142.1.145.228 (talk) 19:47, 15 June 2009 (UTC)

Gender Inequality

This section is absolute nonsense. There is no inequality in pay between men and women. See Warren Farrell's presentation to the Cato Institute. It is true that men EARN (take home) more. There are several reasons for this. But hour for hour, men are not PAID more. Editor0982 (talk) 06:24, 21 January 2010 (UTC)

I'm familiar with your side of the issue, and tend to agree. However, both sides of the issue need to be portrayed. Double-however (I can't say "However, however", hehe), your side of the issue is not only not portrayed in the section at issue, the section is written in such an absolute tone that one would never guess that your side of the issue exists. I would certainly agree with some careful, careful rewriting of that section to incorporate both viewpoints in as neutral a fashion as possible. ɠǀɳ̩ςεΝɡbomb 06:28, 21 January 2010 (UTC)

Gender Inequality

This section is absolute nonsense. There is no inequality in pay between men and women. See Warren Farrell's presentation to the Cato Institute. It is true that men EARN (take home) more. But men are not PAID more. In fact, in high-earning occupations, Farrell's research shows that between similarly qualified, similarly positioned men and women, the women are actually paid MORE than the men.

If gender inequality is to be discussed at all, perhaps the special privileges/preferences that girls/women receive at EVERY of education should be pointed out. An example would be the numerous scholarships available exclusively to women, which blatantly discriminate against men. Perhaps the actual CAUSES of the so-called "gender-quake" should be examined... Namely femo-cratic legislation designed to reward girls/women and hold back boys/men.

It should also be pointed out women's percentages in the universities and the professional schools have increased only because the male numbers have dropped. Medical school is a prime example. The percentage of female med students has increased only because male enrollment has dropped, dramatically and steadily since the mid-1990s.

Overall, this section is garbage. Lies, followed by delusions of eventual female "domination". Wikipedia should be ashamed. This isn't an encyclopedia article. It's feminist propaganda.

Editor0982 (talk) 07:07, 21 January 2010 (UTC)

Your points would be much better taken if you didn't make them in such an angry fashion. It's an encyclopedia article that you can edit, not a bill up for vote in the Senate. ɠǀɳ̩ςεΝɡbomb 07:08, 21 January 2010 (UTC)

Neutrality Checking

I've nominated the article to be checked for neutrality based entirely on the Gender Inequality section, which presents only one side of the issue and in a fashion that is rather essayist in nature. There are compelling arguments to the contrary regarding gender inequality. These counter-arguments should be presented and/or the current tone of the section pushed significantly to the neutral. Gender inequality is not a -fact-, it is a -stance-. ɠǀɳ̩ςεΝɡbomb 17:44, 21 January 2010 (UTC)

The information on this topic in the article is sourced, so if you can provide sourced info for your POV on this, then go ahead. It would be a very useful addition to have some well-sourced data on gender equality/inequality in specific professions and/or specific places if you can deliver that. Peter morrell 11:03, 23 January 2010 (UTC)

Why "disinterested counsel"?

I have restored the adjective "disinterested" not only because it is taken directly from the succinct decription given by the Webbs in 1917 but also because it clearly means "not influenced by considerations of personal advantage" rather than "having no feeling or interest in something". Salisian (talk) 08:06, 9 July 2010 (UTC)

Published academic research defining a profession for reference purposes

There are two credible, published academic papers on project management as a profession, that of Bill Zwerman, Janice Thomas et al from the University of Calgary and my own PhD research, entitled "Is Project Management a Profession? And if not, what is it", which can be downloaded here http://www.build-project-management-competency.com/download-page/

Probably the most salient criteria to determine a profession comes from Andrew Abbott in his "Systems of Professions". Basically, he says that to create a profession, an occupation has to be able to own or control the body of knowledge, and without being able to do that, you cannot have a profession.

Other great references on this topic is the work of Eliot Friedson 1) Freidson, E. (1994). Professionalism reborn: Theory, philosophy and policy. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 2) Freidson, E. (2001). Professionalism: The third logic. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 3) Friedson, E. (1988). Professional powers: A study of the institutionalization of formal knowledge (reprinted.). Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

But you may want to think about this analogy I produced as part of my dissertation-

Tiger Woods is unquestionably a talented golfer. One would be very hard-put to dispute the obvious, which that he is very competent at what he does, perhaps one of the best ever. Therefore he meets the first test of being a professional (n) – skill and competence. In fact, he is sufficiently competent that he makes a very handsome living performing for pay what most of us consider a hobby; hence, applying the second criterion, he meets the ‘earnings test’ to be considered a professional (n). He is not an amateur. Having met both tests (highly competent and earning a living at what most do for a hobby) entitles him to be termed a professional (adj.) golfer. However, just because Tiger Woods meets the criteria to be called both a professional (n) and a professional (adj) golfer, golf does not qualify as a profession, although Woods might call it his profession (his paid job).

It is no wonder that many in the community of practice of project management confuse what is means to belong to a profession. There is the tendency to make the connection that if they are in fact professional (extremely competent) in the way they work, then what they do must, by association, be considered a profession. This is false logic and a semantic trap easily fallen into.

Dr. PDG, Jakarta Dr PDG (talk) 08:55, 12 July 2010 (UTC)

A skeleton article on Professionalism

Please could someone create it as a seperate article using the content below. The sections obviously will need expanding, but I am short of time. Their ought to be seperate articles on Professions, Professionalism, and Professional. Lumping them together is like writing an article on Communes and trying to lump it together with a bit about Communism.

I think Professionalism is very important. This article will help teach people what it is. Places without professionalism, such as many corrupt places in the third world, are horrible miserable places to live.

(Moved someone elses responce placed here, to the end).

My article:

Professionalism

Professionalism is essential to modern society. It consists of the characteristics below. Jobs which do not have all of these characteristics are not generally regarded as being true professions.

Field Of Knowledge

  • Specialised
  • Firmly bounded
  • Often scientific in origin
  • Standardised among practicioners

Techniques Of Application Of This Knowledge

Professions are concerned with the practical performance of services to a client. Decisions about implementation are made objectively.

Reflection

Studies have shown that the most competant professionals think about what they are doing. This results in improved future performance, an increase in understanding, greater ability to cope with uncertainty, the construction of an internalised model which enables the forseeing of consequences of actions, and so forth.

Ethics And Attitudes To The Client

  • Deliver services to the client to the limits of competence
  • Respect confidences granted them
  • Not to misuse for their own benefit the special powers given them
  • Polite and courteous at all times
  • Usually a formal dress code

(This could be added to although I havnt yet decided on the best form of words. For example a professional must treat all clients equally and without any kind of favouratism or predjudice, must disregard all self-interest (no bribes etc), must be sober, must not let any emotions from their own private life or personal feelings intrude apon the relationship, must concentrate on the job in hand, should not behave as if their meeting with the client was a social event, etc.)

Regulation By And Accountability To Peers

Professionals belong to a professional body as a condition of being in practice. This body can discipline or expell members who are incompetant or unethical.

Citizen Professionals

How does this view relate to the idea of "a body of knowledge that people outside of the profession don't have?" The view that everyone should try to live by a professional ethic.

References

Donald A Schon (with two dots over the O), The Reflective Practitioner, Basic Books 1991.

End of my skeleton article.

I don't see why "professionalism" is the word for this concept. The threads I see here are better described by other words that do not invoke the idea of particular, specialized, high-skilled occupations: integrity, ethical behavior, care, excellence, conscientiousness (as in reflecting on what you are doing to ensure than you do it properly and admitting your limits.)
Typically when the word professionalism is used as a call for standards in non-professional occupations, the true foci are demeanor (adopting the dress or manner associated with people in the professional class) or status. I think this confuses the issue. "Dress code" and "ethics" are just not equally important.
I think your mistake is assuming that professionalism only applies to the professions - in fact anyone can and should behave in a professional manner, in other words with professionalism. 92.29.116.249 (talk) 10:04, 9 October 2010 (UTC)

From category intro

This was the intro to Category:Professions...

A profession is a specialized work function, or economic activity, within society, generally performed by a professional. In a more restrictive sense, profession often refers specifically to fields that require extensive study and mastery of specialized knowledge, such as law, medicine, finance, the military, nursing, the clergy or engineering. In the latter strict sense, a profession is a regulated occupation usually requiring entry by examination. Many professions are regulated by statute. A profession is usually a job requiring mental adroitness, as compared to a trade, which requires manual dexterity.

It has been suggested that there are four main criteria that identify a profession:

  1. Custody of a clearly definable and valuable body of knowledge and understanding associated with a long period of training.
  2. A strong unitary organisation which ensures that the profession generally speaks with one voice.
  3. Clearly defined and rigorous entry standards, backed up with a requirement to register with the professional association.
  4. An overriding responsibility to maintain the standards of the profession for the public's benefit.

From Collin's, Ghey and Mills (1989)

The criteria above miss out selfless ethics. 92.29.116.249 (talk) 10:11, 9 October 2010 (UTC)

Confusion with the vernacular use of the words

As Skittleys says above, the poor quality of the Profession, Professional, and (lack of any) Professionalism articles may be due to people confusing them with the vernacular use of the words. Eg. in vernacular American-english, being a hamburger cook is apparantly a "profession"; but being a lawyer or doctor is a profession. 92.29.116.249 (talk) 10:16, 9 October 2010 (UTC)

Lead paragraph

The following defintion has been taken from Accounting and Society by R.W. Perks:

"A profession is defined as a vocation in which skill based on theoretical knowledge aquired through training and examination of competence by a professional body or educational institution is applied to the affairs of others or in the practise of an art in order to meet their needs. It is therefore necessary to distinguish between a professional who is engaged in a full-time career (such as a professional singer), and a member of a profession. The term is generally used to imply some favourable status and many different trade groups representing people following a similar occupation aspire to professional status for their members."[3]

Having re-read it, I think it is quite long winded, but it contains certain key points that are expanded on later in the article. To demonstrate that it is not original research, I will quote verbatim some of the points made by Perks in his book fro which this definition is derived:

(Perks, p2) "A profession may be defined as a vocation in which professed knowledge of some department of learning is used in its application to the affairs of others or in the practice of an art founded upon it."
(Perks, p6) "Professinals are assumed to have extensive theoretical knowledge (whether of medicine, law, the Bible or engineering) and to possess skills based on that knowledge that they are able to apply in practice.
(Perks, p2) "It is necessary to distinguish between a "professional" (in the sense that a person can be a professional footballer or singer) and a "profession" in the sense of a grouping of persons following a similar occupation".
(Perks, p2) "The word is generally used to imply some favourable status and many different occupations aspire to professional status".

I think the lead should be rewritten, as this an other sources about Profession provide more insight into this subject matter. --Gavin Collins (talk|contribs) 08:39, 25 October 2010 (UTC)

  • Nothing wrong with it, but is has none of the brevity, sagacity, completeness, aplomb or long-standing authority of the Webbs' description. Salisian (talk) 14:06, 25 October 2010 (UTC)
I don't think the definition from Webbs really works given the change that has happened since it was first written (1917) . The idea that professionals "supply disinterested counsel and service to others, for a direct and definite compensation, wholly apart from expectation of other business gain" is a bit naive, particularly in the I think a more realistic and up to date defintion is required.
For instance, in the light of Holocaust, in which many German professionals acted as instruments of a disfunctional state, which would tend to indicate that "service for others" may not be have the intention, but was taken to a tragic extreme. Likewise the recent financial crisis would tend to indicate that profession of banker (if it is a profession) has shown to conducted wholly for business gain (i.e. higher profit, larger bonuses), whilst other professions have shown themselves to be very interested in business gain, often to the detriment to the business (e.g. accountants in the Enron scandal).
I am not saying that Perks is the ideal source of information, but would suggest we need to cast around for a better definition, and one that is couched in more modern language. --Gavin Collins (talk|contribs) 16:44, 1 November 2010 (UTC)
  • How about: A profession is a customer insight journey grounded in service transformation and won through targeted educational experience, delivering to the service user end-to-end service gains that impart to the brand joined up holistic service deliveries irrespective of the role of the delivery organisation and/or collateral opportunity? Salisian (talk) 23:46, 1 November 2010 (UTC)
I think a more realistic defintion might be suggested by parapharsing Dr. Magali Sarfatti Larson's introduction to her book The rise of professionalism: a sociological analysis (pages x-xi):
"A profession is a service oriented occupation that is centered on a body of knowledge, techniques or skills that have been mastered through training, whose members form a community who share a relatively permanent affiliation through professional associations, professional schools, and a self-administered code of ethics."
I recomdend we agree to use her as the opening source, not only because you can view the book online, but also because her book appears to provide significant coverage on the topic and her qualifications indicate that she is an authorative source of commentary on this topic. I suggest we extend this definition substantially if you agree to this approach, and amend it if my chose wording is lacking in some way. --Gavin Collins (talk|contribs) 10:41, 2 November 2010 (UTC)

I agree this is a very good definition but I would say for greater clarity that a profession is an occupation that has achieved high status with the public due to qualifications and expertise, control over its own knowledge base and means of entry, and has become an acknlowedged field of expertise in its own right...etc etc. But the above paragraph is a very good start. Not all professions are service oriented (example?) but there is deemed to be a service element in most, as there is in many other occupations. Peter morrell 18:57, 2 November 2010 (UTC)

I think the point of the above definition is that is taken from a reliable secondary source. Of course my choice of wording is far from perfect, and the it can be extended to include more of the same source, or other sources, but at least it is a verifiable definition. What source could you cite to support your ideas? --Gavin Collins (talk|contribs) 20:23, 2 November 2010 (UTC)

Well, we can go on trading quotes for some time: "A profession is a high-status, knowledge-based occupation characterised by abstract, specialised knowledge, autonomy, authority over clients and subordinate occupational groups, and a certain degree of altruism." (R Hodson & T A Sullivan, The Social Organisation of Work, Wadsworths Publishing, 2005, p.258) But the work of Eliot Freidson is also excellent in this regard. The definition has to be complete and well-rounded because a profession has necessarily several key features. If it lacks some of them, then it is merely an occupation. Peter morrell 20:50, 2 November 2010 (UTC)

I understand Eliot Freidson to be an excellent source, and she is cited by Larson as well (e.g. see page 7 & 8 for a direct quotations from her 1977 essay Health and the Division of Labour):
"..ideal type constructions do not tell us what a profession is, only what it intends to be...my intention is to show how the occupations we call professions organized themselves to attain market power."
I think we can still use Larson, because her book provides more than sufficient coverage to extend the defintion to include these points. So if we extend the defintion further using the content of pages x and xi of her book [4], we get:
"A Profession is a service oriented occupation that is centered on a body of knowledge, techniques or skills that have been mastered through training, whose members form a community who share a relatively permanent affiliation through professional associations, professional schools, and a self-administered code of ethics. The specific attributes of an ideal type profession may vary, but the characteristics that make it a distinctive from other occupations are the privilege of autonomy derived from self-regulation and the prestige of having competence that is linked to the needs of society."
Of course we cannot cover all the bases in the lead paragraph - this is simply the starting point, and these characteristics will be expanded upon subsequently. The choice of wording for this summary of Larson is my own, but this can be changed if it defective in any way. Perhaps we could split the definition between Larson and Freidson or even throw Perks into the mix. Again, I am open to suggestions on this defintion can be improved upon. --Gavin Collins (talk|contribs) 10:57, 3 November 2010 (UTC)
An essential element that is missing from this prolix definition is the supply of "disinterested counsel and service to others, for a direct and definite compensation, wholly apart from expectation of other business gain" that I take from the extant definition. Why is this essential? Because if someone failed to provide it, s/he would undoubtedly be subject to discipline for ethical failure. It also neatly encapsulates the giving of advice as well as the service of doing (such as photographing someone / amputating her leg). Salisian (talk) 20:12, 3 November 2010 (UTC)

The intellectual poverty of this article has made it into a newspaper

Today, the major German newspaper published an article, http://www.faz.net/s/RubC3FFBF288EDC421F93E22EFA74003C4D/Doc~E274496C7F4254A67A3519782422DDEDC~ATpl~Ecommon~Scontent.html, summarizing a scholarly paper, http://www.springerlink.com/content/j3410338v2020827/, that explains how bad this article is. -- 129.187.179.90 (talk) 14:03, 28 October 2010 (UTC)

Suggestion that this article or section be merged into Professionalism.

What self-respecting encyclopedia would be without both titles? Is anyone suggesting they are the same? Some brave soul should remove the trite examples list. That is perhaps what some readers are finding irksome and may wish to remove. Salisian (talk) 14:17, 25 October 2010 (UTC)

The idea is that both profession and professional are merged together as "professionalism". Profession and professional both overlap with each other and they can be incorporated into "professionalism" which can also include the broad concept of professionalism. "Profession" and "professional" can then be made to redirect to "professionalism" (possibly to specific sections within "professionalism") so those typing in "profession" or "professional" wont get overlooked. --Penbat (talk) 14:46, 25 October 2010 (UTC)
I would have thought a far more interesting diversion would be to open a new article for "profession" as being (alternatively) an open declaration that is cynically false. I notice the NODoE gives as an example: "a profession of allegiance". LOL I like that. But "professional" remains in use principally as the adjective in "professional person", the noun being dropped by ellipsis - or at least that is my understanding of standard English usage; I cannot comment on US usage. In the former context "professional" can include "golfer", "homosexual" and "office cleaner" (viz. "I am no longer an amateur" / "I am not as I appear" / "I do a good job"), whereas those occupied in such pursuits cannnot be described as being engaged in any kind of profession. (The prostitute joke is of course a good one, that being perfectly properly classified as a profession, and quite possibly the oldest one.) The distinction between the individual "professional" and the collective "profession" is therefore important - and it would be lost if both were to be merged into "professionalism". IMHO that is merely a lazy term used to describe professional quality or character. The better but less used word word is "professionality". It cuts out the fuzz, which is also what an encyclpedia should do. In my view, "profession" should stand alone. Please remove the template. Salisian (talk) 17:46, 25 October 2010 (UTC)
Another important point is that "profession", "professional" and "professionalism" are all different forms of the same word and in the same sense. Give me any other examples in Wikipedia where different forms of the same word in the same sense have different articles ? --Penbat (talk) 11:06, 26 October 2010 (UTC)
First things first. I have given reasons with examples for retaining "profession". How about discussion your assertion "Profession and professional both overlap with each other and they can be incorporated into "professionalism" which can also include the broad concept of professionalism", giving a few reasons and examples? And if you wish to discuss conflating articles, then please may I hear your views and reasons why you feel the appropriate heading for the collection should be the extension rather than the root? No need to reply, just remove the template please. In my view it's ugly, distracting and unnecessary. Salisian (talk) 11:30, 26 October 2010 (UTC)
We'll wait and hear what others have to say. --Penbat (talk) 10:37, 27 October 2010 (UTC)

I agree with ian Salisbury, that it is a daft idea and that two separate articles are better than one, thanks Peter morrell 11:10, 27 October 2010 (UTC)

  • Well we all know that these articles share a the common topic of Profession as their subject matter. What we have to work out is how the sub-topics are related, and whether they are notable sub-topics in their own right. I am not sure if the article Professional is a viable article, in that it is a generic term for people who work within one or more professions. That article seems to repeat most of the subject area contained in this article. --Gavin Collins (talk|contribs) 16:24, 1 November 2010 (UTC)
There clearly isn't a consensus for the proposed merge. I also doubt the need for Professional, except as a dab page to Profession, Professional sport, and so on. Moonraker2 (talk) 08:56, 30 March 2011 (UTC)
A professional is someone engaged in a profession, so professional should be nothing more than a section of the profession article. Is there a separate article for footballer aside from the football article? I thought not. Engineer has a separate article from Engineering but I believe that's warranted because Engineering is not a concept, as profession is, but rather a human endeavour with a long, detailed history and the amount of information in what makes someone an Engineer, and the history of Engineers is fairly distinct from Engineering.
Professionalism is nothing more than acting in manner befitting of a professional, so any suggestion it should have its own article is, IMO, fairly ridiculous.
Therefore I suggest Profession as the main article with a section on Professional, containing nothing more than a note or comment regarding Professionalism and a distinction between a member of a Profession and use of the word to distinguish between an amateur and someone being paid or partaking in an activity primarily for reward rather than enjoyment or societal benefit.
WikiDMc (talk) 11:06, 30 March 2011 (UTC)

Of course these two articles should be merged. It makes no sense whatsoever to have two articles where one deals simply with the adjective derived from the noun. Roundquarter (talk) 12:09, 23 April 2011 (UTC)

Characteristics of a profession

When I added a Perks' list of characteristics of profession to this article[5], I thought the article would benefit from the addition of coverage from a reliable source. However, I was not aware that this list of 22 characteristics was controversial, as this article testifies. The points that Perks made are valid, and where intended to provoke questions to be asked about nature of professions, and what makes them different from other occupations. Is the article evidence that the list should split off into its own list article? --Gavin Collins (talk|contribs) 16:20, 1 November 2010 (UTC)

List of Professions

Teachers should be removed they follow federal and state guidelines for what they teach in most cases. Thus there is little sense of autonomy. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 72.200.202.160 (talk) 05:45, 29 March 2011 (UTC)

Interpreters should be removed. To be an interpreter does not require any formal training (only understanding of 2 languages, spoken or otherwise), nor is there any professional body charged with the development of interpreting as a profession and enforcement of professional standards.

Stockbroking should be added, along with fincial advising; they do meet the above criteria and other usual criteria. WikiDMc (talk) 15:26, 17 February 2011 (UTC)

Several of the alleged "professions" should be removed, as they do not have any sort of licensing regulation. Professors and scientists, for example, are not licensed. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 75.9.212.197 (talk) 01:50, 20 December 2011 (UTC)

The whole List of Professions section needs to either be removed, or completely overhauled for a number of reasons.

  • The list is inexhaustive and which professions end up in the list has no consistent rule. It reads as though they were all added randomly by contributors who felt that their own profession needed to be in the list.
  • There is debate as to various inclusions. Comments as to which professions meet the outlined criteria should not be in the article. Debate should take place here on the talk page, never within the article itself.
  • The list sits oddly within the context of the article, and jars the reader's flow.
  • The references given relate to only some of the list, and are somewhat weak. Perhaps the list would be better of if simply pulled directly from one government source. i.e.
  • This list is not particularly illustrative of the rest of the article. It does not continue the points made, or interelate with the concepts of Professionalism.

Perhaps this list would be best moved to its own article, so that "Profession" can keep a tighter focus. In short, the current status of this list does not serve this article well. Andrewaskew (talk) 00:23, 17 May 2012 (UTC)

Split

This list would be best moved to its own article, so that "Profession" can keep a tighter focus. There is enough information here for a list article. That article can then outline formal criteria for inclusion and notability. --Andrewaskew (talk) 05:01, 27 June 2012 (UTC)

Support: I support the split, SchreyP (messages) 20:27, 23 August 2012 (UTC)

The concept of profession

The present article is strongly influenced by current business usage. It could be improved by placing "profession" in its historical context and recognizing the diversity of its related meanings: 1) The Latin word professio means a public declaration or acknowledgement (D. P. Simpson, Cassell's New Latin Dictionary, NY 1960; there are probably more updated sources for this). It is related to the verb profiteor, "to profess," which could at that time include announcing one's candidacy for public office. 2) This original meaning survives today in the "profession of faith" or creed in the Catholic Church and probably other religions. (See Roman Missal) 3) It is also used for "religious profession," in which a person becomes a member of a religious institute by "professing" poverty chastity and obedience through vows or promises. See Code of Canon Law, Canon 654: "By religious profession members assume by public vow the observance of the three evangelical counsels, are consecrated to God through the ministry of the Church, and are incorporated into the institute with rights and duties determined by law." 4) Already in classical Latin, a person could "profess" a science or art, such as law or philosophy, indicating his competence to be of service in that area. The idea of "profession" as an occupation occurs in Suetonius (cited in Cassell). 5) In the early Middle Ages, religious life was considered a "profession" in the occupational sense. John Cassian, writing ca. 425 about his life as a monk, says, "Our profession also has a scopos [goal] proper to itself." (John Cassian, The Conferences, transl. by Boniface Ramsey, O.P., Ancient Christian Writers #57, Paulist Press, NY, 1997, I.3) The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary gives all these nuances and more. I am using the 6th edition (Oxford, England, 2007). SrMElizabeth (talk) 13:20, 19 May 2011 (UTC)

My response is that NOT being an article about history, religion or medieval society, it's hard to see how much of what you say can be fitted in, interesting though it is. Maybe you can insert into the article a short paragraph of just a few lines to summarise your points with citations? And see how others see it. That might be a great starting point. It is up to others to keep or throw out whatever you come up with. thanks Peter morrell 04:53, 20 May 2011 (UTC)

Personally, I find the historical background very interesting; it's precisely the kind of information I like seeing in a Wikipedia article. Under its own subheading, I think information like this provides an excellent background context. It's likely, in the coming century, that our concept of professions will continue to evolve. I feel that the historical context contributes by demonstrating how malleable the concept of professions is, by showing how much it has already changed. --EcoChap (talk) 10:24, 12 April 2012 (UTC)

Science as not fitting rule 5 and 6

Plenty of national associations out there... many commonwealth nations have a Royal Society (not to mention THE Royal Society). America has the AAAS. All of these societies have codes of ethics. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.174.168.16 (talk) 01:22, 13 January 2012 (UTC)

Agreed. Scientist is quite a broad term. In the UK, the terms Chartered Environmentalist, Chartered Scientist and Chartered Biologist are legally protected and only granted to professionals. --EcoChap (talk) 10:16, 12 April 2012 (UTC)

Philosophy

Philosophy does not meet criteria 6-7, but it does meet 5. For example, in America, we have the American Philosophical Association. So I have changed the entry to reflect this fact.

Concerning criteria 6-7: Philosophy does (and probably always will) fail to meet criteria 7, but criteria 6 is a strange standard to apply to philosophy. Given that philosophy takes ethics as one of its topics of research, philosophy is uniquely unable to adopt a profession-wide standard of ethics. If the profession is inquiring into, disagreeing over, debating, and questioning ethics, the profession cannot have a profession-wide ethical standard. Which is to say, you can't have a profession-wide ethics for philosophy for the same reason you can't have a profession-wide theory of physics for science. Inquiry into, disagreement over, debate concerning wildly different theories of physics is one of the subjects of science and so science cannot have a theory of physics imposed upon it as a professional standard.

I am not saying criteria 6 is an incorrect criteria for professions, but this would seem to be a special case given the nature of this particular profession that it only makes sense to judge philosophy by criteria 1-5 and 7. Which is to say, that given the unique circumstances regarding philosophy, criteria 6 doesn't make sense as a criteria for judging whether or not philosophy is a profession. Criteria 6 must be "bracketed"/"ignored" here since philosophy uniquely cannot force a philosophical ethical theory on the field as a whole. Good general criteria often need to make exceptions for unique cases, and philosophy is one of them concerning criteria 6 given that ethics is a part of the subject matter of philosophy.

- Atfyfe (talk) 22:34, 26 April 2012 (UTC)

I tried keeping it short, but in some way indicating that while philosophy fails to meet criteria 6-7, criteria 6 may be inappropriate to apply in this case. Here's the way I put it in the entry: "Philosophers (does not fulfill criteria 7, thus does not qualify as a profession as described above; also does not fulfill criteria 6, but 6 may be uniquely inapplicable in this case since ethics is a subject in philosophy)" - Atfyfe (talk) 22:46, 26 April 2012 (UTC)

Doctors are not necessarily physicians

The link of Doctor should be corrected and pointed to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doctor_%28title%29 which is more appropriate than physician. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 190.19.32.71 (talk) 00:14, 7 February 2013 (UTC)

Provincial color?

What the hell is this? I google and only get paint and wood stain colors. As a section it seems trivial and unnecessary. Maaaaaybe it would be worth keeping as a sentence in the History section. 98.116.253.94 (talk) 19:18, 17 June 2013 (UTC)

Good point. This 2010 edit was very odd and I have undone it. – Fayenatic London 21:12, 17 June 2013 (UTC)

Disinterested

I have restored this adjective to the principal definition, as originally defined by the Webbs. In this sense being "disinterested" means being uninfluenced by considerations of personal advantage; it does not mean behaving without feeling or interest. Salisian (talk) 13:36, 10 June 2015 (UTC)

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The Profession of Arms

Not included on the list of professions, the profession of arms is arguably one of the first and fundamental professions. Far before science and technology lent it's hand to doctors or lawyers it was applied to the profession of arms first I believe the definition has "lost touch" in recent times and would like to engage on any alternate opinions. I believe the profession of arms includes all required criteria. I recognized the following criteria apply to all professions. A defined set of practices. Education and/or training requirements for entry. Some type of measurement for entry (like an examination). A process for advancing its practices. A set of ethics/rules/etc. A controlling or defining body Why the Military is a profession? -- A defined set of practices--Successful Military forces throughout history refer to these practices as "Doctrine", a method by-which they do business. -- Education and/or training requirements for entry.-- All professional military forces throughout history have some variation of a "basic training". -- Some type of measurement for entry (like an examination).-- Standards for mental capacity and physical fitness are more often than not the most common example of this. -- A process for advancing its practices.-- Continuous demand/review to upgrade military capacity, capability, or combat power are a constant effort. The US military reviews/edits/trains doctrine to match changes in science, technology or capability. -- A set of ethics/rules/etc. The Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ) and the Code of Conduct are two examples by-which the US have established ethics and rules. -- A controlling or defining body.-- Militaries throughout history have a Chain-of-Command (CoC). In the US the CoC begins with the President and Secretary of Defense all the way down to Joe in a fox hole. We have executive and judicial oversight by civilians outside the CoC.

With this discussion, I would like the Profession of Arms to be added to the overall list of professions, and should be recognized as one of the fundamental professions alongside Doctors, Lawyers and Engineers.

A cogent argument in opposition to your view exists on the Talk page of List of professions. I don't have a dog in this fight, so I will not express an opinion. I think some 'rules' have been enumerated on several pages regarding what defines a 'profession,' but these 'definitions' are not consistently applied, hence the confusion.
Please sign your posts on talk pages. The sinebot missed your entry, or possibly did not exist when you posted. Consequently, there is no way to contact you on your usertalk page. Thank you. Rags (talk) 06:12, 30 January 2015 (UTC)

Totally agree; also theft out is the Profession of Public Service. Jakolaw (talk) 15:03, 12 January 2020 (UTC)

Opinion piece

This article feels like an opinion piece based on someone's understanding of where professions are today. Reference to the history of the professionalisation of medicine in different countries shows that the basis of professionalism is the formation of self regulation to ensure quality and to combat devaluation and charlatans. The sequence provided, especially of establishing a training school is largely wrong. Apprenticing was the general route historically.

Professions self regulate until a power group seizes control. Then government regulation and oversight ensure internal processes of control are not abused by the power group for the benefit of the profession and society. Ethical rules are established. Training and education in formal schools and curriculum come later not before. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Strider22 (talk) 12:24, 21 April 2020 (UTC)

I agree. Some parts, such as Characteristics and Autonomy, look like a high school essay, not an encyclopedia. There are too many quotations and in-line citations. I have tried to get the section on prestige up to standards more ...prestigious and professional. TiTJiL (talk) 06:14, 2 July 2020 (UTC)

Contribution of Muslim scientists

The muslim scientists had played a great role in the development of biological, physical and other more than thousands of education fields. And they continued their efforts for many years and even centuries, so they deserve a lot of success. They proved that there is a great presence of Muslims. 182.182.119.22 (talk) 16:56, 11 May 2022 (UTC)

Occupation

What do you mean by profession 120.89.104.45 (talk) 13:58, 24 May 2022 (UTC)