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EECS 690

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EECS 690 February 26 Professions Just to clear up some word confusion: In common usage, a professional is generally anyone who gets paid to do something. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: EECS 690


1
EECS 690
  • February 26

2
Professions
  • Just to clear up some word confusion
  • In common usage, a professional is generally
    anyone who gets paid to do something.
  • Professionalism in common usage refers to a
    general code of conduct in the workplace
  • In this case, we mean to discuss a more technical
    and specific definition of Profession

3
Characteristics of Professions
  1. Mastery of an Esoteric Body of Knowledge (e.g.
    Medicine, Law)
  2. Autonomy
  3. Formal Organization (e.g. Bar Association)
  4. Code of Ethics
  5. A Culture of Practice (e.g. Medical researchers
    vs. medical practitioners)

4
Mastery of Esoteric Knowledge
  • Computing seems to fit this constraint rather
    well, especially for those jobs in computing that
    require a college degree. The curriculum is
    standard for computing degrees in the US, and is
    folded into the entity that accredits most
    engineering programs (the Accreditation Board for
    Engineering and Technology (ABET)).
  • In addition to degrees, many companies offer
    certifications of expertise in given systems or
    applications.

5
Formal Organization
  • While no single professional society exists to
    encompass all computing experts, some large and
    growing societies are present (e.g. ACM and
    IEEE-CS).
  • While these organizations are large and growing,
    there is no obligation for employers to restrict
    their hiring to members of any particular society
    or holders of any particular certification.
    (Contrast Actuaries, Lawyers, Doctors, CPAs,
    etc.)

6
Autonomy
  • In this area, computing jobs do not take on this
    characteristic of professions. The various
    organizations that exist have no power other than
    the power of association. Autonomy is not de
    jure.
  • However, there is a sort of de facto autonomy in
    computing jobs, most notably in programming,
    because the programmer gets to make decisions
    about code for those who do not have the ability
    to read or write it.

7
Codes of Ethics
  • There is no single recognized code of ethics
    binding on all computer experts.
  • There are, however, some existing ideas of what a
    code of ethics for computing as a profession
    would look like (e.g. the ACM/IEEE-CS Software
    Engineering Code)
  • This code is specific to software engineers, but
    in places is sufficiently general for wider
    application.
  • Codes of ethics are not just for socializing new
    members, but are also guidelines for what the
    public can and should exprect from computing
    professionals.

8
Culture of Computing
  • It is difficult to generalize about the culture
    of computing because of the wide variety of jobs
    that the term computer professional could
    encompass.
  • There is really very little self-identification
    of such a culture, and very little formal
    self-regulation in computing jobs.
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