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Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, Administrator
This question seems to miss the point of what an internet discussion forum actually is and how it works.jan39 wrote:Can we know the criteria for being as moderator etc?
Moderators usually failed to answer most of the questions. Mostly we get answer from other common people's similar experiences and knowledge on the forum instead of moderators.
That may be because you misunderstand their primary role. A moderator's role is to moderate the discussion, to guide it or give it a steer if need be, and to ensure that the T & C's are being adhered to, that posts are in the correct forum and thread, etc. It is partially administrative (posts in the correct threads, splitting threads, etc) and partially judicial (advising people if their language is inappropriate).jan39 wrote:Moderators usually failed to answer most of the questions. Mostly we get answer from other common people's similar experiences and knowledge on the forum instead of moderators.
Sorry to all moderators if they felt any disrespect in anyway from my post.secret.simon wrote:That may be because you misunderstand their primary role. A moderator's role is to moderate the discussion, to guide it or give it a steer if need be, and to ensure that the T & C's are being adhered to, that posts are in the correct forum and thread, etc. It is partially administrative (posts in the correct threads, splitting threads, etc) and partially judicial (advising people if their language is inappropriate).jan39 wrote:Moderators usually failed to answer most of the questions. Mostly we get answer from other common people's similar experiences and knowledge on the forum instead of moderators.
Most of them are not experts in immigration law and the advice that they provide is typically out of their own experience going through the immigration process themselves. Given the various pathways that the immigration system has, it is possible that no moderator has experience of that specific pathway.
But that is not how a forum is meant to function anyway. The purpose of any forum is that members with experience advise others going through the process. And it is perfectly possible that a moderator may not have that experience while other members do. And it is better for the member with experience to advise you on a topic than for a moderator with no experience of that topic.
Just to reiterate, most moderators are not lawyers (and neither am I) and their role is not to provide advice, but to ensure that members discuss their issues calmly and courteously and in accordance with the Ts & Cs. Any advice that is provided by them is, in a sense, in their role as members.
Casa's first post above summarises pretty precisely the workload of a moderator. Remember that they are unpaid and occasionally get subject to a lot of unwarranted abuse. One experienced and well-regarded moderator recently quit due to abuse in the wake of the Brexit referendum.
So, for starters, the criteria appears to be;
a) Have spare time to go through and understand what people are putting on the forums and gauge whether it is in the right place.
b) Keep an eye out for the appropriateness of language being used on the forums.
c) Have a thick skin
I am sure the moderators are always looking for volunteers for that role. Feel free to apply.
We have 100,000 odd members. The Brains Trust and hive mind of the forum is the membership itself.jan39 wrote:Sorry to all moderators if they felt any disrespect in anyway from my post.
Yes I misunderstood, I thought they are experts and have to give right information to common members. It means in respect of immigration knowledge and information they are just as normal members. This misunderstanding is not only to me, I know a few people they think same way that moderators are special members with special powers so they expect them as experts. Sorry again dear moderators.
Different cultures, language (non-mother tongue), some members' sense of entitlement, some members' blatant disregard of Board T&Cs, spammers, scammers, snakeoil salesmen/women, misuse of forum, thread-hijackers, barrack-room lawyers, lobbyists, multiple posters, users masquerading under multiple ids, all sorts of self-promoting 'advisors' masquerading as members, hard-pressed and time-poor moderatorsjan39 wrote:But I have a small complaint that moderators should be polite and respond in a professional way. Their comments or style sometimes feel like personal. The comments like 'No need to be selfish', 'refrain from digging up old posts' 'Do Not Jump in between' 'we are not walking encyclopedias' etc. These sentences reflect a reaction with little anger and personal. We respect moderators as correctors.
They can say the same thing in a polite manner, even police won't use that style.
I was referred by a moderator in one post to an older similar post and when I asked a question from the member of that post (because my question was unanswered in the new post)I was warned by moderator not to DIG old posts, and then the post was locked. Can we not ask some one for the sake of information? That's the reason for this forum. The moderator could have told me same thing in another way like 'responding to older post is not allowed' or 'please do not make queries in older posts'.
Thank you
Great explanation.noajthan wrote:Different cultures, language (non-mother tongue), some members' sense of entitlement, some members' blatant disregard of Board T&Cs, spammers, scammers, snakeoil salesmen/women, misuse of forum, thread-hijackers, barrack-room lawyers, lobbyists, multiple posters, users masquerading under multiple ids, all sorts of self-promoting 'advisors' masquerading as members, hard-pressed and time-poor moderatorsjan39 wrote:But I have a small complaint that moderators should be polite and respond in a professional way. Their comments or style sometimes feel like personal. The comments like 'No need to be selfish', 'refrain from digging up old posts' 'Do Not Jump in between' 'we are not walking encyclopedias' etc. These sentences reflect a reaction with little anger and personal. We respect moderators as correctors.
They can say the same thing in a polite manner, even police won't use that style.
I was referred by a moderator in one post to an older similar post and when I asked a question from the member of that post (because my question was unanswered in the new post)I was warned by moderator not to DIG old posts, and then the post was locked. Can we not ask some one for the sake of information? That's the reason for this forum. The moderator could have told me same thing in another way like 'responding to older post is not allowed' or 'please do not make queries in older posts'.
Thank you
- it certainly is a heady, dynamic and challenging cocktail not to say a rich tapestry of all human life.
But out of all that rough and tumble, (the laughter, the tears), pops a sometimes surprising and often heart-warming number of life-changing solutions for people in our community.
Apologies for any confusion.jan39 wrote:I was referred by a moderator in one post to an older similar post