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What is Professionals

Handbook of Research on Knowledge-Intensive Organizations
Those who perform the tasks associated with the professions are called professionals. They also display the characteristics expected of the members of specific professions (Middlehurst & Kennie, 1999).
Published in Chapter:
Redefining Professional: The Case of India's Call Center Agents
Premilla D’Cruz (Indian Institute of Management, India) and Ernesto Noronha (Indian Institute of Management, India)
Copyright: © 2009 |Pages: 23
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-60566-176-6.ch032
Abstract
Scholars researching the area of the sociology of professions had earlier predicted that as occupations seek to improve their public image, professionalism would embrace all their incumbents. It is therefore no revelation that call centre agents in India identify themselves as professionals. Using van Manen’s hermeneutic phenomenological approach, we explored this dimension with 59 call centre agents located in Mumbai and Bangalore, India. The findings demonstrate that neither the trait nor the power approaches drawn from the traditional literature on the sociology of professions explain call centre agents’ identification with professional work. Instead, agents’ experiences validate the contemporary explanation that emphasises the appeal of professionalism used by employer organisations as a means to convince, cajole, and persuade their employees to perform and behave in ways which the employer organisation deems appropriate, effective and efficient. It is in this context that agents accept stringent work systems and job design elements, techno-bureaucratic controls and the primacy of the customer in return for the privileges bestowed upon them by way of being professionals. While professional identity thus serves as a means of socio-ideological control facilitating the realisation of the organisation agenda, it is not all-encompassing as agents simultaneously show signs of resistance.
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More Results
Educational Changes and Teacher Identity in Tanzania: Implications for Industrial Development
Individuals or teachers who usually use knowledge and skills to teach and or solve different problems related to teaching and learning.
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Professional Development and Training Needs for Administrators in an Islamic University Malaysia
Are staff that are officially recognized by professional organizations for that profession where the staff has completed the training or education needed by them and usually the professional organization has set the standards that must be met by participants.
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