Wanna be an Ambassador?
This post will cover what an ambassador is and does as well as give a hint how to apply if you are interested. What we look for when picking Ambassadors are helpful, polite users that embody the rules of OpenStudy. The reason why is because Ambassadors are, well, Ambassadors! If you look up the word, http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/Ambassador , you will see references to being an official representative, a messenger, and a diplomat. An OpenStudy Ambassador is an official representative of the community. That is why we want people who follow the rules, promote the rules, and don't work against the community. An OpenStudy Ambassador is a messenger to new users and the outside world. They greet people by sending messages to new users and helping them learn how to use the site. They invite people through other social networking sites. An OpenStudy Ambassador is a diplomat by trying to keep chat, questions, etc. more friendly through positive discussions. If you become an OpenStudy Ambassador, you will go through a "month" of required training. This is just some light training and can easily be fit into a schedule. See, it is really 4 sessions that we spread over a month and allow 2 weeks for each reply so that even a busy student can find a couple hours in there to reply. You also have some rewards as an Ambassador. First, we have a secret clubhouse that is not on OpenStudy. Second, your successful participation is tracked and can be used in a letter of reference or resume. This is also a form of volunteerism, which really looks good on college applications. A few other things we want: You must have at least 90 days studied on your profile. You must not have been suspended by a moderator for cause in the last 3 months. Suspensions past 3 months will be reviewed out to 6 months. You must have a form of ID. A government ID that can be scanned or photographed is best. School IDs are also allowed. If you do not have these things, then an official document and a picture are acceptable. A birth certificate or a school document, like your report card or enrollment acceptance letter, is seen as official. This should help confirm age/grade and must be clearly readable in a photo or scan. Then a second picture of you holding the document is also required. If you are interested in helping people, welcoming new users, following and promoting the rules, want a bit of official recognition, can follow the rules, have been here a while, and can be identified, then you can go to this page: http://blog.openstudy.com/2014/01/30/openstudys-diplomatic-corps/ Hidden on there is the \(\color{green}{\underline{\text{NEW APPLICATION FORM}}}\) link. Find the link and you can apply.
Ok and what are you trying to tell us?
IKR!
Ummm... read it and you will know. I am the Chair of the Ambi program. This is how we recruit.
Is this US applicants only?
No. It is world wide. We have ambassadors from... I think it is 4 countries at the moment.
what is a smart Score
what r u soppse to type there?
Yours, at the moment, is 45. It is the thing in your circle.
Oh oK
Ok I did now what?
I did everyting there what know?
so this is the right link??? https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1rx5MY0UJ8RVicPguZFEzwpQS99k913-nFEjfPVwsJ8M/viewform because i was given another link.... n no i didnt fill it out x3 was too much personal info 'o.o
That looks like the old form. Not the new one. Ambassadors are, from a legal standpoint, a form of intern for inquus corporation. As such, they need certain information to confirm identity. If you think your country and name are personal, I don't see how you would get a job. And if you are talking about the ID, that is sent to inquus/OpenStudy and \(\textbf{not}\) the ambi management team.
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