It may seem to be a bit redundant to
have a tenet of the Code of professional CONDUCT actually be Conduct.
But, evidently it is necessary to address conduct to cover points that
may not be addressed in the specifics of the other tenets. It is
noteworthy that of the 7 tenets #3 has them most illustrative
Behaviors. Most of them deal with items such as: Appearance,Conflict
of interest, and self regulation in accepting assignments.
So to me tenet #3 is the general
instruction to just act right. You might think that would be a
no-brainer. However, when one of the examples being not to take and
mind altering drugs it shows ya something. That somebody some where
did something silly so that RID has to address it.
It makes me think of the warning
on a bag of peanuts saying “Contains Nuts”...Really?? But
obviously somebody must have tried to sue the Peanut company for not
telling them. HEY BE CAREFUL, that bag of peanuts you just bough
actually has nuts in it (yeah I know peanuts are actually legumes).
So basically act like you have some sense and act like you wanna keep
your job
Below is an example of a shirt that is a candidate for breaking tenet #3 and good taste :D
3.0 CONDUCT
Tenet: Interpreters conduct themselves
in a manner appropriate to the specific interpreting situation.
Guiding Principle: Interpreters are
expected to present themselves appropriately in demeanor and
appearance. They avoid situations that
result in conflicting roles or perceived or actual conflicts of
interest
Taken from NAD-RID CODE OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT
In the video below how does the interpreter respect tenet #3??


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