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"A professional is simply someone who gets paid for what it is they do, i.e. engaged in a profession." please Just elaborate a little so we can understand. | |||
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"Mr here. An engineer normally has an underlying trade. I work as an engineer but I'm a plumber by trade, but I'm still classed as an engineer at work. " And this probably explains our problems and as a country why we lag behind the world. In the UK an engineer means menial. Who the fxxk would want to be a structural engineer when your similarly qualified friends would be called doctors. Whilst you are classed as the same as toilet cleaners | |||
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"Mr here. An engineer normally has an underlying trade. I work as an engineer but I'm a plumber by trade, but I'm still classed as an engineer at work. And this probably explains our problems and as a country why we lag behind the world. In the UK an engineer means menial. Who the fxxk would want to be a structural engineer when your similarly qualified friends would be called doctors. Whilst you are classed as the same as toilet cleaners" Cant disagree with that to be fair. I've also a degree in my field, Infact I'm more qualified than my top boss but I'm still an engineer, crazy when you think about it. | |||
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"Mr here. An engineer normally has an underlying trade. I work as an engineer but I'm a plumber by trade, but I'm still classed as an engineer at work. And this probably explains our problems and as a country why we lag behind the world. In the UK an engineer means menial. Who the fxxk would want to be a structural engineer when your similarly qualified friends would be called doctors. Whilst you are classed as the same as toilet cleaners" As a guide. A graduate would need to do a minimum of four years or further training and exams to be called a professional. That was when five percent of the population did degrees. Based on that I would suggest the current meaning is someone who has four years after a second degree (phd, msc,, etc) | |||
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