Statements A, B and D describe core characteristics of teaching as a profession and are therefore correct. Professional teaching indeed requires specialised training and recognised qualifications, and professions normally follow a code of ethics and have a service orientation. Continuous professional development is also central to maintaining professional standards in teaching. Statement C is wrong because professional accountability extends to learners, parents, institutions and society at large, not merely to oneself. Hence the only wrong statement is C, so the correct combination is C only.
Option A:
Option A combines A and C and assumes both are wrong, but statement A correctly states that professional teaching needs specialised training and qualifications. Only statement C is wrong because it denies the wider accountability inherent in a profession. By misclassifying a correct statement as wrong, this option fails to identify the actual set of wrong statements. Therefore A and C only cannot be accepted as correct.
Option B:
Option B links C and D, treating both as wrong; however, statement D is true because continuous professional development is a recognised feature of the teaching profession. Statement C alone is the incorrect one as it ignores social and institutional accountability. Since this option wrongly includes a true statement among the wrong ones, C and D only is not the right answer.
Option C:
Option C correctly isolates C as the only wrong statement and excludes A, B and D, which are accurate descriptions of professionalised teaching. It recognises that teachers are accountable to multiple stakeholders and that the denial of such accountability is erroneous. Because it includes exactly the wrong statement and omits all correct ones, this option matches the requirement of the question. Therefore C only is the correct combination.
Option D:
Option D includes A, B and C as wrong statements, but both A and B are valid descriptions of professional teaching while C alone is incorrect. Treating them all as wrong blurs the distinction between professional characteristics and the faulty claim about accountability. Hence A, B and C only cannot be considered the correct answer.
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