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Louise Campbell; Di Cantali; Nikki Doig; Sarah Hulme; Argyro Kanaki; Shona Robertson; Lorraine Syme-Smith; Lina Waghorn – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2024
Higher education lecturers who have moved into teaching on professional education programmes from careers in professional practice are an under-researched group. Questions related to self-concept combined with wider social and sectoral issues relating to perceptions about the nature and purpose of higher education can affect the development of…
Descriptors: Professional Education, Professional Identity, Lecture Method, Self Concept
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Watson, Sandra; Harmel-Law, Amanda – Journal of European Industrial Training, 2010
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to explore the relevance of human resource development (HRD) for law firms in the UK. It examines how the characteristics of legal professional practice in the UK, including the partnership structure, long established methods of targeting solicitors and the law society, may act as barriers to the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Lawyers, Human Resources, Professional Occupations
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Kennedy, Aileen – Research Papers in Education, 2007
The dynamic nature and multiple interpretations of professionalism make any analysis of it as a static, homogenous concept somewhat difficult. Much of the existing body of literature, which explores professionalism from a traditional sociological perspective, is now being challenged by developing concepts of professionalism that support particular…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teachers, Faculty Development, Politics of Education
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Stabler, Ernest – Canadian Journal of Education, 1979
The author examines teaching in Canada as a self-regulating profession, in comparison to other professions in Ontario and to teaching in Scotland. Trends are noted toward inclusion of lay members and government representatives on governing bodies and toward greater control over professional education and certification. (SJL)
Descriptors: Advisory Committees, Comparative Education, Governance, Governing Boards
Richards, H. S. – United States Bureau of Education, Department of the Interior, 1915
Admission to the legal profession in England is controlled by organizations representing the solicitors and barristers, the two great divisions into which the profession is divided. this control by private organizations is peculiar to England, and a proper appreciation of the present condition and tendencies in English legal education therefore…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Professional Occupations, Numbers, Foreign Countries