That one meme where a kid's mom is putting a box on the top shelf out of the kid's reach, but the box is labeled "de-professionalization"

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That one meme where a kid's mom is putting a box on the top shelf out of the kid's reach, but the box is labeled "de-professionalization"

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"It sounds, and I suppose is, anti-democratic, but we’ve bent over backwards so far to dignify the amateur voice that we’ve forgotten to say, at some point, these simple words: You don’t know what the hell you’re talking about."
A Penny, if that Much, For Your Thoughts: The De-Professionalization of Intellectual Labor
by Pamela Haag
October 16, 2013, 8:17 PM
http://bigthink.com/harpys-review/a-penny-if-that-much-for-your-thoughts-the-de-professionalization-of-intellectual-labor?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+bigthink%2Fmain+%28Big+Think+Main%29&utm_content=Google+Feedfetcher
We’re more likely, however, to get a neo-Victorian economy of hobbyists in a complex post-modern world, without the educational resources for them to make good on their leisure enterprises.
Journalism is the most profound example of de-professionalization. Journalism was professionalized in the 1900s. Schools to perfect it and study it sprung up, where once there had only been the ink-stained wretches, schooled in nothing but hard knocks. Not everyone had to pursue a journalism degree to become a reporter, but with professionalization came the notion that the journalist had to adhere to codes of conduct and methods. Among other things, this professionalization brought us the thoroughly modern notion of journalistic “objectivity.”