Abstract
The scale measures the degree of professionalism. (1972) designed the instrument to contain five statements related to each of the five dimensions of professionalism. Clikeman et al. (2001) measured the use of the professional organization as a referent (PO), belief in public service (PS), belief in self-regulation (SR), sense of calling (SC), and autonomy (AUTO) by the mean of the responses to the five statements corresponding to each dimension of professionalism.
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References
Clikeman, P. M./ Schwartz, B. N./ Lathan, M. H. (2001): The Effect of the 150-Hour Requirement on New Accountants’ Professional Commitment, Ethical Orientation, and Professionalism, in: Critical Perspectives on Accounting, Vol. 12, pp. 627–645.
Hall, R. H. (1968): Professionalization and Bureaucratization, in: American Sociological Review, Vol. 33, pp. 92–104.
Kalbers, L. P./ Fogarty, T. J. (1995): Professionalism and Its Consequences: A Study of Internal Auditors, in: Auditing, Vol. 14, pp. 64–86.
Morrow, P. C./ Goetz Jr., J. F. (1988): Professionalism as a Form of Work Commitment, in: Journal of Vocational Behavior, Vol. 32, pp. 92–111.
Snizek, W. E. (1972): Hall’s Professionalism Scale: An Empirical Ressessment, in: American Sociological Review, Vol. 37, pp. 109–114.
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(2007). Professionalism. In: Management Accounting & Control Scales Handbook. DUV. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-8350-5471-4_169
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