mnphysicist
Have Courage to Trust God!
- May 11, 2005
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NopeIs there still an age limit on moderator status?
NopeI just applied. I think that some clarification on the religion icons would have been helpful. Until about 5 min ago, I was listed as a non-nicene Christian! (Christian-seeker icon).
Is that something that can cancel me out of a staff application? I truly was not aware of that clarification, and would not have chosen that icon if I would have known.
The intent is to give staff a handle on evaluating how well a candidate relates in the area they are applying for. For new areas, or smaller forums, its less of a factor. The underlying issue, is folks need to be somewhat active in the areas where they are applying, and somewhat recent in doing so. Obviously for a low traffic forum, or a forum undergoing change, thats not practical, and teams evaluating a candidate will take that under consideration.I have one problem, here:
The area I am most active in, has since the 7/7/07 reforms, has for all intents and purposes, died, or is dying a slow death.
So how is it that a person must have a substantial amount of posts within that area?
Now I have 200 posts just since Oct. 30th, 2007. But this is mostly in the formerally congregational area, and one area of the theology section.
As far as the 3 month period goes, if you were active on CF during the last 3 months, even though the forums you want to mod were not, that is entirely reasonable to consider the other activity as part of the 90 days. If you just returned 30 days ago, and made 200 posts since then, it would be prudent to wait another 60 days.
There will always be changes, some no doubt will be popular, others probably not. Consistency of participation is one of the underlying aspects which drove this policy.
It can be beneficial for sure, but again folks need to be active under the current rules and policies, before coming back on staff. The direction Lee wants to take us in, is way way different than it was before. Many current staff are having to unlearn, and then relearn different ways of handling things, and thats not easy by any means. That being said, the soft skills of experienced staff when working with members are highly valuable... (ie, the detailed counseling PM's and such)Would the fact that one was in the past a moderator be taken into consideration?
A couple examples may help.
1. Prior to Nov, we had very narrow and highly defined rules. Ie, at night, do not exceed 55mph. Currently, our rules are more like, drive the appropriate speed for the conditions at hand, and there are virtually no written guidelines as to what is ok, and what is not. That is a huge shift in moderating practice, where the old practices have to be unlearned, and replaced with new ones. (a huge shift for me as well.... its all too easy to fall into detail mode, so I find I have to edit a few extra times, to remove specificity, and formality in official communications).
2. Prior to Nov, the chain of command was somewhat loose. Now, it is quite strict. Admins have responsibility for their teams, and suforums staff have very little autonomy. Jr staff are not allowed to participate in appeals, unless invited by their admins, and even then, they don't have read access. Policy and procedures are much more top down, than democratic. Its a vastly different culture, pretty much 180 degrees from what we had a few months ago, and even hugely different than what existed in most of 06 and 07.
Thus, while mod experience can be helpful, having to unlearn prior practices can be trying as well. Teams no doubt will consider such, when evaluating mod applicants.
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