We have all seen how tough certification procedures have
made respected professions out of accountants and financial planners.
Not exact matches
When people whose opinion you
respect use a product or service not because they are paid to do so but because they
made an informed choice — a choice that actually impacts their art, or their
profession, or their passion — that sends a powerful message.
Second of all, let's
make teaching the most
respected, most revered
profession in America.
We need a mayor who will demonstrate real leadership when it comes to policing: holding the Met to account where they fail in their duties, building bridges with local communities and
making policing a
profession that carries the
respect of both the officers and the people they serve.
Participants took part in a real - time electronic poll which explored their views on a series of issues relating to their
profession: Among the results were: over three quarters of BME teachers considered themselves to be ambitious, yet stated they are being held back by racial discrimination, and the attitude of senior colleagues; nearly two - thirds (62 %) of BME teachers felt their school or college was not seriously committed to addressing their professional development needs and aspirations; 63 % of BME teachers said their employers were not committed to ensuring their mental and physical wellbeing at work, with workload cited as the single most negative factor impacting on their wellbeing; the vast majority of BME teachers felt the Government does not
respect and value teachers and does not understand the day to day realities of teaching (99 %); three quarters of BME teachers said they were not confident that their headteacher will
make professional and fair decisions regarding their future pay.
The VOICE / CSEA mission includes winning more
respect for their
profession, lobbying counties to
make on - time payments and promoting fair and consistent child care regulations and enforcement.
We need, in short, to
make teaching an attractive and
respected profession.
By responding to these themes with swift and decisive action, the Government will seek to
make a real difference to the training of our teachers and work to
make sure the teaching
profession has the confidence and
respect of the Australian community.
Little mention is
made of our reality here, however, given the real and deleterious effects we witness, for example, as current teacher educators when we work with potential / future teachers who almost daily express serious concerns about joining a
profession now with very little autonomy, not much
respect, and a stark increase in draconian accountability measures that will be used to hold them accountable for that which they do, or do not do well.
We have actually something like a revolving door in teaching because teachers don't get the
respect; they don't get the pay; and they don't get the working conditions that
make it feel like a good
profession.
You can
make a really good case that people tend to not
respect and appreciate this
profession.
The Runners also get all sorts of gizmos to help them out, like deflectors which
make the Hunters change direction, sonic stunners to freeze them in place for a couple of minutes, and invisibility glasses to
make them pretend that «game show heavy» is an important and
respected profession, no matter what their sister - in - law «Doctor Sarah» has to say about it, the self - important bitch.
In this
respect, your commentary is exactly correct, namely, that we have done precious little to understand the true impact of our inherent conflict in how we govern our
profession — namely, that it's in the interests of lawyers to
make more money and in the interests of the public to pay less.
«BC lawyers voted twice and
made it very clear that they want an inclusive
profession that
respects equality.»
The Law Society is bound to comply with the Charter in its own decision -
making, particularly in
respect of the maintenance of a diverse and inclusive legal
profession.
While the situation was not the major spat between the chief and the PM that some media
made it out to be, the legal
profession's response was indicative of the
respect in which McLachlin is held.
I am a very, very lucky lawyer, and I have been mentored and inspired by a great many lawyers, too many to list but among them: my late uncle, Daniel Golden, a solo practitioner in my hometown much
respected in his jurisdiction, who rose in his career to be elected President of his State Bar and was still practicing at 90; the first partner to whom I was assigned, the late Robert Rosenman, then Managing Partner at Cravath, Swaine & Moore and a legendary US securities lawyer and practice leader, who taught me to think critically and the importance of attention to detail; Dame Rosalyn Higgins, later President of the International Court of Justice but long before that I was in the first class that she taught at the London School of Economics, whom I found inspiring both for her achievements and her person; and latterly Lord Woolf, former Lord Chief Justice, who has provided inspiration and encouragement for our P.R.I.M.E. Finance project consistent with so many other inspiring contributions he has tirelessly
made to the
profession.
This award is given to a KTLA member who has been admitted to practice law for fewer than 10 years; has
made a noteworthy contribution of time, talent, and energy to KTLA; has given consistent and exemplary participation in KTLA activities; and whose conduct brings credit and
respect to the legal
profession.
(a) prescribing standards of practice
respecting the circumstances in which homeopaths shall
make referrals to members of other regulated health
professions;
The court noted that s. 44 of the Regulated Health
Professions Act («RHPA») provides that a panel obtaining legal advice shall
make the advice known to the parties and the parties may
make submissions with
respect to the advice.
National statistics show that certified reporters
make more money than non-certified reporters, and certification brings consistency and
respect to the
profession.
An Act to improve access to justice by amending the Solicitors Act to permit contingency fees in certain circumstances, to modernize and reform the law as it relates to limitation periods by enacting a new Limitations Act and
making related amendments to other statutes, and to
make changes with
respect to the governance of the public accounting
profession by amending the Public Accountancy Act
Both solutions will occur because the power of the news media and of the internet, interacting, will quickly
make widely known these types of information, the cumulative effect of which will force governments and the courts to act: (1) the situations of the thousands of people whose lives have been ruined because they could not obtain the help of a lawyer; (2) the statistics as to the increasing percentages of litigants who are unrepresented and clogging the courts, causing judges to provide more public warnings; (3) the large fees that some lawyers charge; (4) increasing numbers of people being denied Legal Aid and court - appointed lawyers; (5) the many years that law societies have been unsuccessful in coping with this problem which continues to grow worse; (6) people prosecuted for «the unauthorized practice of law» because they tried to help others desperately in need of a lawyer whom they couldn't afford to hire; (7) that there is no truly effective advertising creating competition among law firms that could cause them to lower their fees; (8) that law societies are too comfortably protected by their monopoly over the provision of legal services, which is why they might block the expansion of the paralegal
profession, and haven't effectively innovated with electronic technology and new infrastructure so as to be able to solve this problem; (9) that when members of the public access the law society website they don't see any reference to the problem that can assure them that something effective is being done and, (10) in order for the rule of law, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and the whole of Canada's constitution be able to operate effectively and command sufficient
respect, the majority of the population must be able to obtain a lawyer at reasonable cost.
(2) The provisions of the Business Corporations Act, including the regulations
made under that Act, that apply with
respect to professional corporations apply with
respect to a health
profession corporation established under subsection (1).
That is because those behind the move to certification do not want the field
made up of practitioners who conduct mediation on the basis of two very different, and in many
respects incommensurate,
professions of origin.
The questions now become these: What is more important in the greater scheme of things; the interests of ingrained sales types, or the public at large, and, where does the real estate practitioner fit into the equation (depending upon one's philosophy) regarding whether being a Realtor should simply be a money -
making gambit or a widely
respected profession?
We're almost as bad as home inspectors... our society
respects education... I'm not saying that a degree
makes you a better agent but in the eyes of the public I believe it would convey a sense of professionalism and hence
respect for the
profession.
With the emphasis on high tech, we've forgotten the traits that
made our
profession something special: salesmanship, honesty, knowledge, truthfulness, integrity,
respect, cooperation, and fair play.