Professional Identity Statement
You have likely entered Walden with many different identities—for example, parent, sibling, graduate student. Throughout your master’s program, you will make strides toward a professional practitioner identity, as well. Developing a professional identity requires three important steps: (1) gaining knowledge, skills, and values held by other practitioners in the chosen profession; (2) differentiating oneself from those who are not part of the chosen profession; and (3) identifying with the chosen profession. One way in which students can begin to develop a professional identity is through critical self-reflection (Trede, Macklin, & Bridges, 2012).
For this Assignment, you write an initial draft of your professional identity statement as a leader in the human services profession. In doing so, you reflect on your values and beliefs, how you define yourself as a practitioner, and your special interests (e.g., specific issues and populations of interest to you, including those that speak to a social justice passion) in the context of leading change efforts in the human services profession. In Weeks 5 and 11, you will revisit your professional identity statement, integrating what you have learned in this course about the various roles of advanced human services professional practitioners.