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Perhaps not, then. Tom Send a noteboard - 28/01/2012 11:12:33 PM
Historically, professions are regulated and licensed for the very reason that the professional is obligated by rules of ethical conduct which do not permit him or her to perform below a certain legal standard of care. For example, a doctor cannot turn someone away from the emergency room and is obligated to preserve life at all costs, and thus cannot generally say "He's not worth saving," even if the person he's asked to care for is a terrible person. A lawyer is obligated to "zealously" defend his client, even if that client is a serial killer. An accountant has strict responsibilities to properly keep books of record and manage money in his care.

When someone is asked to "act professionally", it means that a standard of care is expected beyond what would be required simply for responsibly performing a job. The borders may be blurred a bit these days, but that is the intent.

Thus, if teachers were "professionals" then they would continue to teach even if the union contract was in dispute due to their licensed standard of care. I suppose that doesn't exist right now. Maybe it should.

Regardless, that is the point. I have to be careful when taking on clients because if, halfway through a matter, a client stops paying, I have to follow strict rules about continuing to represent that client until a judge permits me to cease representation (or new counsel is obtained). That's not something that most people have to worry about.
Political correctness is the pettiest form of casuistry.

ἡ δὲ κἀκ τριῶν τρυπημάτων ἐργαζομένη ἐνεκάλει τῇ φύσει, δυσφορουμένη, ὅτι δὴ μὴ καὶ τοὺς τιτθοὺς αὐτῇ εὐρύτερον ἢ νῦν εἰσι τρυπώη, ὅπως καὶ ἄλλην ἐνταῦθα μίξιν ἐπιτεχνᾶσθαι δυνατὴ εἴη. – Procopius

Ummaka qinnassa nīk!

*MySmiley*
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Profession/professional - 28/01/2012 06:22:40 AM 710 Views
well from this side of it... - 28/01/2012 08:45:08 AM 339 Views
I think your point is valid. - 28/01/2012 10:23:37 AM 351 Views
I'm not sure I agree with that. - 28/01/2012 10:59:31 AM 362 Views
You can disagree with the English language all you like. - 28/01/2012 03:29:05 PM 492 Views
Well. - 28/01/2012 06:11:26 PM 339 Views
I don't see much point in trying to preserve the archaic use of the word - 28/01/2012 01:54:53 PM 411 Views
Ha! That's silly. - 28/01/2012 03:32:01 PM 365 Views
True story.... - 28/01/2012 09:11:10 PM 406 Views
You're absolutely correct. It's just society trying to make shit jobs sound better. - 28/01/2012 03:25:48 PM 367 Views
Yeah, it's important to denote which occupations demand extraordinary, society-affecting judgement. - 28/01/2012 05:19:30 PM 446 Views
at this point, though, I think teaching should be professionalized - 28/01/2012 05:37:46 PM 416 Views
that will be hard for them to do - 28/01/2012 05:44:53 PM 350 Views
depends on the teacher you talk to. - 28/01/2012 07:11:58 PM 331 Views
That is a good point. - 28/01/2012 08:16:38 PM 322 Views
You need a license, don't you? *NM* - 28/01/2012 08:15:10 PM 156 Views
I believe the actual term used is "certification" - 28/01/2012 08:49:23 PM 323 Views
We have a certification process that any college grad with common sense could pass. - 28/01/2012 10:36:29 PM 364 Views
Perhaps not, then. - 28/01/2012 11:12:33 PM 315 Views
in my mind teaching is indeed a profession. *NM* - 28/01/2012 08:25:18 PM 225 Views
and there is the problem - 29/01/2012 02:59:15 AM 423 Views
A teacher must have a collage degree and not only that but - 29/01/2012 11:07:51 AM 337 Views
oh I disagree with the strict code of conduct part - 29/01/2012 05:57:35 PM 344 Views
Yes! - 28/01/2012 09:25:03 PM 387 Views
Connotations change. Deal with it. *NM* - 28/01/2012 10:29:20 PM 324 Views

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