Professional Competency

866 Words2 Pages

Professional competence can mean various things to different people. Competency in any career or profession has many basic requirements that are learned in a classroom environment as well as many essential elements that must be learned through formal, on-the-job training in order to acquire the knowledge and skills necessary to function adequately as a professional in a workplace setting. Competency in the counseling field is not a ‘once learned, always known’ type of knowledge; it requires a combination of classroom education, internship training to acquire confidence, knowledge, skills, and experience, and an obligation of continuing education on a life-long basis.

Commitment to continuous development of competency depends a great deal on the motivation of the individual, and the extent of self-awareness and honesty he/she has concerning abilities and skills. Accessing one’s personal level of competence could prove to be a daunting task without a focused desire for continued professional development, the help of co-workers, supervisors, continuing education classes, and a genuineness of attitude that isn’t afraid, or resentful of critique. Cultivating an honest understanding of one’s own knowledge or lack of knowledge in certain areas, or even a gap in skills or abilities is crucial to the continuing development of professional competence.

Recommended as supportive tools to help guide evaluations, Corey, Corey and Callahan, cite other colleagues and psychological literature that offer Formative and Summative assessments. These reviews, suggested for use during training and at the completion of a professional program, or when applying for licensure status, “address individual practitioner’s strengths and provid...

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...d willing to recognize and correct errors.”(Ronald M. Epstein & Edward M. Hundert, Downloaded from www.jama.com by guest on August 19, 2008) Maintaining high levels of competence for a lifetime requires self-motivation and self-direction, serious dedication to professionalism and a desire to uphold the standards of the counseling profession, a commitment to one’s personal code of ethics, and a true enjoyment of the quest for learning.

Works Cited

Corey, G., Corey, M. S., & Callanan, P. (2011, 2007 , Eighth Edition). Issues and Ethics in the Helping

Professions. Belmont, CA: Brooks/Cole; Cengage Learning.

Ronald M. Epstein, M., & Edward M. Hundert, M. (Downloaded from www.jama.com by guest on August

19, 2008). Defining and Assessing Professional Competence. JAMA, Journal of the American Medical

Association , JAMA, January 9, 2002—Vol 287, No. 2 .

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