Does professional citizenship resonate with you?

So, you think you’re a professional? And most of us do. Think we’re professionals. We get to work on time, roll up our sleeves, coach colleagues, advise the business, fight fires; balancing the needs of workers and organisations at the same time. And we go home. To our friends and loved ones, to the gym, to the pub, to the cinema.

But if we’re professionals, do our responsibilities start and end with our day job? Do we have a duty to use our unique skills to help others? How can we go beyond our roles while balancing our work, family and other busy life commitments? These ideas sit at the heart of professional citizenship, which is described by the University of Minnesota as 'an identity: seeing oneself first as a citizen with special expertise working alongside other citizens with their own special expertise in order to solve community problems that require everyone’s effort.’

So, what do you think? How can we be better professional citizens? And should we be? Does the concept resonate with you? Please share your thoughts - the good, the bad and the ugly!

Parents
  • Have to say that I'm not particularly comfortable with this. 'Professional Citizenship' indicates that some sort of public recognition of this identity would follow. True helpfulness, community spirit, philanthropy, etc, requires no witness or applause, regardless of whether this is given with reference to professional expertise. Many thousands (or millions - who knows?) do things every day for their community or neighbours without flag waving. Random Acts of Kindness is a growing movement and a concept I prefer.
Reply
  • Have to say that I'm not particularly comfortable with this. 'Professional Citizenship' indicates that some sort of public recognition of this identity would follow. True helpfulness, community spirit, philanthropy, etc, requires no witness or applause, regardless of whether this is given with reference to professional expertise. Many thousands (or millions - who knows?) do things every day for their community or neighbours without flag waving. Random Acts of Kindness is a growing movement and a concept I prefer.
Children
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