- Look up
competence, competent, incompetence, or
incompetent in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Broad concept article:
Competence (polyseme), capacity...
-
communicative competence, as
developed in linguistics,
originated in
response to
perceived inadequacy of the
notion of
linguistic competence. That is, communicative...
-
Gillick competence is a term
originating in
England and
Wales and is used in
medical law to
decide whether a
child (a
person under 16
years of age) is...
-
Competence is the set of
demonstrable personal characteristics or
KSAOs (Knowledge, Skills, Abilities, and
Other characteristics) that
enable job performance...
- In psychology, the four
stages of
competence, or the "conscious
competence"
learning model,
relates to the
psychological states involved in the process...
-
Competence (also
called competency or capability) is a
polyseme indicating a
variety of
different notions. In
current literature,
three notions are most...
- transformation.
Competence can be
differentiated between natural competence and
induced or
artificial competence.
Natural competence is a genetically...
- In
United States and
Canadian law[citation needed],
competence concerns the
mental capacity of an
individual to parti****te in
legal proceedings or transactions...
-
Cultural competence, also
known as
intercultural competence, is a
range of cognitive, affective, behavioral, and
linguistic skills that lead to effective...
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Cultural competence in
healthcare refers to the
ability for
healthcare professionals to
demonstrate cultural competence toward patients with
diverse values...