Formation (Nouvelle)

From FreecycleFAQ
Revision as of 17:35, 28 July 2017 by Mvaillan (talk | contribs) (Created page with "=== Responsabilités de tous les modérateurs === *Les modérateurs doivent suivre le guide des règles de base du Réseau Freecycle, ainsi que...")

Jump to: navigation, search

MyF home

Other languages:
English • ‎español • ‎français

1. AVANT DE DEVENIR MODERATEUR

Petite histoire du Réseau Freecycle

Le 1er mai 2003, Deron Beal a envoyé le premier mail annonçant la création du Réseau Freecycle™ à environ 30 ou 40 amis et quelques associations à but non lucratif à Tucson, en Arizona. Au moment ou Deron a fondé le Réseau Freecycle, il travaillait pour une organisation à but non lucratif, RISE, qui fournit des services de recyclages aux entreprises du centre ville, et de l'emploi de résinsertion au habitants de Tucson dans le besoin.

Au fur et à mesure que l'équipe recyclait, plutôt que de regarder des objets en parfait état être jetés, ils se sont retrouvés à appeler ou faire des tours dans le coin pour en faire profiter des organisations caritatives. En pensant qu'il devait y avoir un meilleur moyen, Beal a créé la première mailing-liste Freecycle de façon à ce que les personnes de Tucson puissent donner et recevoir. Freecycle était lancé.

La carte mondiale des groupes Freecycle.org

Le concept Freecycle.org® s'est répandue dans 110 pays, ou des milliers de groupes locaux représentent des millions de membres - des personnes aidant d'autres personnes et "changeant le monde, don après don." Résultat, nous préservons l'environnement en empêchant des tonnes d'objets réutilisable de finir à la décharge!

Merci d'accepter d'aider le mouvement Freecycle.org et votre propre communauté en proposant d'être modérateur bénévole. Bienvenue et appréciez ce temps d'apprentissage sur Frecycle.org, en prenant part à cette aventure.

Freecycle logo square.JPG

Le but de Freecycle.org

""Notre mission est de construire un mouvement de partage international qui réduit les déchets, économise de précieuses ressources et réduit l'impact environnemental, tout en permettant à nos membres de profiter des avantages d'une large communauté.""

Cliquez ici pour plus d'information sur notre philosophie.

Règles de base pour la modératin

Sans modérateurs locaux, une liste de diffusion est rapidement envahie de spam et de messages inappropriés. Les membres finissent par partir et la liste devient une ville fantôme. Avec votre aide, votre liste locale va prospérer et tout le monde en profitera. Votre aide est inestimable.

Chaque groupe Freecycle doit fonctionner de façon similaire. Chaque communauté a la possibilité de mettre en place des règles locales, tant qu'elles suivent le guide des règles de base.

Devoirs du modérateur

En résumé, vous passerez sur le groupe quelques fois par jour. Voici les devoirs principaux d'un modérateur :

  • Traiter les problèmes et plaintes qui arrivent. Vous devez être aimable autant que possible, même si le mail du membre n'est pas le plus plaisant que vous ayez vu. Vous devrez vous souvenir que vous représentez Le Réseau Freecycle(R) à tout moment.
  • Approuver ou rejeter les messages en attente de modération. Les messages et demandes en attente doivent être traitées dans les 48h.
  • Répondre aux mails des membres. En tant que "responsable de la relation client" pour Freecycle.org, les réponses doivent toujours être calmes et claires, jamais sous le coup de la colère. Il est préférable d'utiliser une réponse modèle pour la plupart des cas fréquemment rencontrés. Beaucoup de questions des membres peuvent être résolues en utilisant notre guide d'utilisation de Freecycle.
  • Démodérer les membres qui postent correctement, ou après quelques semaines d'adhésion.
  • Maintenit les règles de bases de Freecycle.org. Vous approprier le Manuel du modérateur et vous y référer régulièrement. Rejoignez les groupes de discussion des modérateurs une fois promu modérateur principal de votre groupe.

A faire ou ne pas faire

Le manuel du modérateur donne une liste complète de choses à faire ou ne pas faire sur Freecycle.org.

Responsabilités de tous les modérateurs

  • Les modérateurs doivent suivre le guide des règles de base du Réseau Freecycle, ainsi que les règles locales de votre groupe.
  • Les modérateurs doivent maintenir une relation positive, amicale et non menaçante avec les autres modérateurs et les membres.
  • Les modérateurs doivent apprécier le privilège d'être modérateur pour Freecycle.org et faire attention à ne pas en tirer profit. NE JAMAIS répondre à une annonce avant qu'elle ne soit publiée sur le site pour que tout le monde puisse l'avoir vue. C'est un motif de perte de ce privilège.
  • Les modérateurs doivent conserver confidentielles les informations personnelles des membres auxquelles ils peuvent avoir eu accès.
  • Soyez sympa, aidant, jamais dégradant ou humiliant. Prenez soin du groupe, n'en soyez pas le chef.
  • Remplissez vos engagements envers Freecycle.org en vous occupant du groupe le temps que vous avez accepté de vous y consacrer. Si vous n'êtes plus capable d'y consacrer ce temps, contactez le modérateur principal ou les autres modérateurs, afin que les tâches soient réparties en votre absence. Si vous êtes seul, veuillez contacter votre GOA(point de contact et de soutien) pour une aide temporaire. Pour plus d'informations sur votre GOA, veillez cliquer ici.

Responsibilities of the Lead Moderator

  1. It is your job to see the job of moderating your group is always covered. you or another moderator should check in on it at least once during the day.
  2. Recruit new mods as needed to make sure that your group is covered in case of emergency.
  3. Keep your files and admins up to date. Recommended admins and changes to required files will be announced on FIOD and FLC and posted in the mod manual
  4. Make important decisions pertaining to group-related issues, in consultation with your co-moderators.

For those with the desire to do more there will be opportunities for getting involved in other group tasks, such as:

Required files

All Freecycle.org groups are required to maintain two group files. Please see the links below for more information on these files.

  1. Guidelines and Disclaimer
  2. Farewell

In addition to the required files, some groups create files to send to members in certain circumstances, for example when a post has to be rejected or deleted. This helps keep the communications with members consistent and also saves time for the Moderator. See the Moderator Manual for sample files that you can modify and use for your group. For instructions on how to create files for your group, click here.

Many groups have "Required Group Guidelines" and "Disclaimer" as separate files. It's not as convenient as the combined "Guidelines and Disclaimer" file, but it's perfectly acceptable to maintain these as separate files as long as both files are sent to all new members.

What is not allowed on Freecycle.org

No drugs.jpg No-alcohol-sign.gif No weapons.png
In addition to items mentioned in the Guidelines and Disclaimer, the following is not allowed:

  1. Adult-oriented posts
  2. Advertising
  3. Bickering, ranting, snippiness
  4. Foul language or vulgar ID’s
  5. Pet breeding posts
  6. Ads, including ads for garage, boot or yard sales
  7. Being Lead Moderator on more than one group or moderating a group other than where the mod lives.
  8. Keeping the whole group (or majority of the group) on moderation.
  9. Themed Freecycle.org groups, such as just children’s clothing.
  10. Restricting Wanted posts to a specific day or time, requiring that Wanted posts be balanced with Offers, or requiring that the first post be an Offer post.
  11. Keeping a public database of no shows or problem members. You may keep these, but they must be for the mods' eyes only.
  12. SPAM. Spam is any post that endorses a commercial product or is being blanketed across The Freecycle Network. SPAM is dealt with harshly. If we can't identify the poster as a local member we report them to Spam Control. To find out how to report a Spammer, click here.
  13. Scams. From time to time enterprising scammers attempt to fleece Freecycle members out of money, often for delivery or courier fees associated with an item they are offering. Please report suspected scammers to Spam Control.

Would you allow it?

How would you deal with the following pending posts? Follow your own group's guidelines as well as Freecycle.org's required group guidelines when answering these questions. If you don't have a policy in place for some of the issues, this is a good time to consider what your group's policies will be once your trainer leaves your group.

20 Pending post details.JPG
A) Accept as is;
B) Reject (state reason);
  1. Offer: Imodium HD
  2. Offer: Guppies
  3. Offer: Drop-side crib, excellent condition
  4. Wanted: Infant car seat
  5. Offer: Instant ramen, expiration date 12 months ago
  6. Offer: Mikes Hard Lemonade
  7. Wanted: Clothing, any gender or size. We have a large family and will donate whatever we can't use to charity.
  8. Offer: Wine glasses
  9. Wanted: Desperate for baby boy clothes. My husband lost his job and we can't afford to buy any for the new baby.


For answers please see the key at the bottom of the page.

Part 2, HOW-TOS

Learn how to use the Moderator Tools

MyF home

Refer to this how-to-guide for help in using the Mod Tools.

Important.jpg

Set your moderator preferences

Set your moderator preferences so you will be notified of pending posts. Please click here to learn how.

3.5 Preferences.JPG

Experiment on the Playground or on your own group

  1. Find the Mod Tools.
  2. Check your own moderated status. Hint: Use "Search Members" to find your record. Make sure you check "Include Moderators" and "Include Lead Moderators" under Membership levels.
  3. If your moderated status is "Unmoderated" change it to "Moderate Member for Posting."
  4. Leave Mod Tools and return to the group's home page.
  5. Make a couple of posts, Offers or Wanted.
  6. Go back into Mod Tools, find your own posts and approve or reject them them. Remember to check "Include pending posts."
  7. Open Mod Tools, and find the answer to these questions: How many members are your group? How many Moderators? How many Lead Moderators?

Optional: Join the Moderator Playground

If you're reluctant to experiment on your own group, please join the playground at the URL that was included in your acceptance letter. Contact your Group Outreach and Assistance volunteer for more information about the playground.

When you're done practicing, please delete any files and admins that you have created on the playground and remove your posts.

To remove yourself from the playground, first demote yourself to moderator, then demote again to member, then leave the group. Make sure you do not remove yourself from My.Freecycle.org.

Check your group's settings

5 Group options.JPG

As soon as you have been given moderator privileges on your group, please check to see if your group has been set up correctly. These are things you will need to check:

  • Group files. Make sure you have the two required files:
  • Automatic sending. Make sure that the required files are going out when members join or leave the group.
  • Time zone. Please make sure this is correct so that posts will reflect the correct time.

Customize your group

Here are some areas you may want to tweak after you are promoted:

  • Admins. Remove any unnecessary admins. This is a good time to expire your recruiting admin unless your group needs additional moderators.
  • Group options.
  • Postal codes
  • Group description
  • Local group policies. If your group has any local policies beyond the basic Freecycle guidelines, it is a good idea to post those in an Admin. You may also wish to include local policies in the Guidelines and Disclaimer file that you send to all members when they join.

Part 3, ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Moderated vs. Unmoderated Members

There are two basic types of members, "Moderated" and "Not moderated." "Moderated" means all messages go to Pending and have to be approved. "Not moderated" means member messages go directly to the board with the exception of messages triggered by Hotwords.

Whether to moderate new members is a moderator's decision, the default setting for new members is unmoderated. If you choose moderated, you must take them off moderation after they post correctly or after a short time on the list even with no posts. This means you will no longer be reviewing their messages, and that whatever they post will go directly to the board. Hotwords will still catch inappropriate posts after this point. You will be manually changing membership status for new members who have learned how to post correctly.

When should members be taken off of moderation? As soon as possible. Many moderators take them off moderation after one good post. Some mods make it two good posts, others make it a month. Members who have not posted within a couple of months should be taken off moderation to keep your group's moderated percentage from steadily increasing.

Unmodbutton.jpg

Full moderation of a group is not allowed. If you have a group that is highly moderated, you may remedy the situation by clicking on the "Unmoderate Entire Group" Button and re-moderating the problem members. Your GOA may require you to unmoderate the entire group this way if s/he comes across a group with high levels. Emergency Full Moderation can be used for short times only as necessary, but please contact your GOA should you need to do this.

Required guidelines and policies

This section of the Mod Manual contains a link to the all-important Guidelines and Disclaimer, Terms of Service, the copyright and trademark policy and other important legal information.

Local moderator decisions

Pets.jpg
  • Pets. Pets can be very controversial. If you decide that your group should allow pet posts, we have a list of tips for you.
  • Coupons, tickets, frequent flyer miles, game pieces, postage. These items can clutter the board and don't really help accomplish our goal of keeping items out of the landfill.
  • Cribs and infant car seats. Because of safety and liability concerns, some moderators (especially in the U.S.) prefer not to allow posts for these items. Other moderators allow these items after editing the post to include a statement advising members to check the latest consumer safety data before using these products. After all, a drop-side crib may be too dangerous to use for an infant, but it could be cleverly repurposed into something useful.

For more information on local moderator decisions, please click here.

Please note: If you are working on a group where the Lead Mod is a freecycle.org email address, you will be able to make decisions for group policy after the Lead Mod has left. Groups with Freecycle.org moderators are run with simple guidelines of only Free, Legal, and Appropriate for all Ages. If you have been referred by a local mod to join an existing team, it would be wise to check with that local mod team to see what policies have been set.

Common situations encountered by moderators

The Mod manual includes a list of common situations that moderators are likely to encounter, as well as sample responses, files or Admins that you may use in when you encounter those situations.

Communicating with members

Sending messages to members
There are two ways to send a messages to members:

Receiving messages from members
There is a link on your group home page that members can use to contact the mod team. However, you may need to send out something that you want members to reply to, for example a request for volunteers. In that case you will need to ask members to reply at https://my.freecycle.org/home/groups/GROUPNAME/contact_mods, replacing GROUPNAME with the name of your group

As an important anti-spam safeguard, never publish your Mod Team's email address. We do not ever put the moderator address on information that goes out to members because we don't want spammers to get ahold of it.

Tshirt.jpg

Promoting and building your group

Click here for some ideas on how to promote your group. Have some more great ideas? Share them on the Freecycle Leadership Community.

Links & resources

  • Member FAQs
  • Abbreviations & acronyms. We admit it, we abbreviate everything. Click here for a full glossary
  • Org chart and leadership team. Most members think of The Freecycle Network as being a community resource, but it is actually a large, global organization with more than 5,200 Freecycle.org groups in over 110 countries. See the Org Chart and Leadership team for more information about the basic structure of The Freecycle Network.
  • OTHER USEFUL LINKS AND RESOURCES. The Moderator Manual contains a list of useful links for moderators.

Moderator discussion groups

Being a Moderator is being part of a team. Moderators with years of experience and moderators with five minutes of experience are all part of our Freecycle.org team. We are our own support group. These discussion groups help mods keep up with the changes as My.Freecycle.org develops and improves on an on-going basis. Only moderators are approved for membership, so you will need to wait until you have been promoted to moderator and all Freecycle.org Lead Moderators have left the group.

Tech Discussion Group/FIOD

Tech Discussion Group/FIOD is a discussion group for moderators with problems with the site.

Freecycle Leadership Community

FLC.JPG

FLC is a forum where moderators from around the world discuss issues with their groups, offer advice and opinions, and share fun stories from their own groups.

Problems, solutions, and suggestions

How to get help with your group

Once your trainer leaves your group, your Group Outreach and Assistance (GOA) volunteer will become your primary support for any issues you might face. Please refer to the Mod Manual for more information.

Technical problems

As Moderator, you will occasionally encounter glitches with the system, and you will hear from members who suspect things aren't working the way they should. Please refer to the Mod Manual for information on how and where to report these problems.

Other Member Problems

For member problems you are unable to solve, refer them to one of the following email contacts below:

  • myfreecycleADMIN@freecycle.org -- (mostly) unmanned email address is now the address username and password requests are sent from and there is an automated response for members. This links to MyFreecycleSupport@f.o which is the email address for members to get through to someone for assistance with a query.
  • myfreecyclesupport@freecycle.org email address for members to get through to someone for assistance with a query other than Password and username requests.
  • info@freecycle.org -- for members who have general questions. An autosent file with more information to direct them to a manned email box if needed.
  • help@freecycle.org -- for members who cannot get answers to other issues, who wish to take a complaint to the next level, who need special assistance (pre-approved use of logo or trademark, press contacts, etc.)

Copyright and trademark information

Because The Freecycle Network at Freecycle.org is unique and amazingly successful, there are many who have and who would try to use it for personal gain and profit. For that reason:

Freecycle logo square.JPG
  • The Freecycle Network is incorporated as a non-profit organization.
  • The Freecycle.org logo is trademark protected.
  • We link only to those groups which are approved local groups.

We need to do our best to use the Freecycle.org trademark properly so that we don’t lose the right to it. As Moderators, we have an essential role to play in protecting the Freecycle.org trademark. These are the key points:

  • Always use the term "Freecycle.org" correctly. "Freecycle" is NEVER used as a verb and must always be capitalized.
  • Include the proper attribution statement in group emails and home pages.
  • Use the registered trademark symbol, either ® or (R), the first time the word "Freecycle.org" is used in any text (in Admins, Files, signatures, etc.). Freecycle group sites should have an (R) or ® next to the logo at the top and an (R) or ® next to the first use of The Freecycle Network (or of the word Freecycle, whichever comes first). The subsequent uses of "Freecycle" can be without the trademark symbol.

The U.S. copyright and trademark information is explained fully in the Moderator Manual. If you are in the European Union, please refer to the E.U. guidelines in the Mod Manual.

Sometimes group mods will get mad at Freecycle.org(R) and start their own group. If they use the word "Freecycle" or some derivative, it is a violation of copyright law. Contact your GOA if you see a group that has done this. The way to determine if a group is "official" is to go to Freecycle.org and enter the name; if they are listed there, then all is well.


If you want to do more

The Freecycle Network is always on the lookout for people who can help with all of the behind-the-scenes work that is needed to keep everything running smoothly. If you have any spare time or special skills you would like to offer, please see this link for more information.

You rock.jpg
Answer key