There are a few different issues here which need to be teased out…
Gordon Cheng - 27 May 2008 09:51 AM
But I am wondering if, as one of the organizations that is committed to the support of the diocesan mission, whether it would be good to be a bit more fussy about people like me, or even me.
This is really meant to start the discussion. The real question is, to what extent do we want the forums (and with it, the moderators) to be supporters of the diocesan mission? And, what should this look like?
The issues are (a) what moderators do and what moderation is (b) what the forums are for and (c) how all people participate in terms of behaviour, rather than views.
To cover these points briefly:
a) Moderation isn’t (and I think never should be) about advancing or suppressing any particular views, within the bounds of the Posting Policy. Being a moderator isn’t about being the thought police, it is, if anything, important to guard against that so free and open discussion can continue. Nor is it about being part of a cheer squad or political party where you fall into line for the good of the “team” (ala Malcolm Turnbull).
Moderators should never use their moderation powers (editing/deleting posts/topics) to advance or stymie particular views (again within the Posting Policy). Being a moderator is more of a janitorial role than anything - you tidy up here and there, and beyond that it is peoples behavior - not their views - that may be of concern. Discussion about “encouraging good moderation” should only really revolve around fairness of moderators actions - closing topics that have become overheated, moving threads to dead horses etc, and acting fairly in that regard. Moderators should generally not take into account the views being expressed, and given they are not enforcing orthodoxy (or any views), they don’t have to pass any kind of orthodoxy litmus test.
(b) On what the forums are for, in regards to “to what extent do we want the forums to be supporters of the diocesan mission?” my response would be that forums in and of themselves can’t support or not support anything, they can only reflect the views of those participating at the time as best as possible. I think these forums do a good job at giving everyone a fair go in that regard, whether you’re an atheist (Rob C), evangelical, or whatever. Of course you will be challenged about your views (which is a very good and important thing) but everyone gets a fair go.
The corollary of trying to impose some kind of agenda on a community of people with a variety of views invariably means, to me, the suppression of dissent, which is something I hope never happens, as without critical voices we all become weaker and duller in our own views, as we no longer have critical views to engage with to keep us sharp.
The forums are, and should only ever be in my view, a fair representation of the views of those participating in them. The invitation is always there for all watching that if you don’t like what’s being said, jump in and join the discussion!
Edit: And I should add the forums (as software and location) can enable discussions to take place in terms of supporting the Mission and Connect09 etc, which they do, but the forums as a community is just a group of people participating at a given time.
c) On the behaviour of all members including moderators along the lines of Adam’s comments, those are fair points but are separate issues from fairness in moderation decisions say, and the views they hold. Again it is important not to conflate all these things together (and I’m not saying Adam was, just that this thread could).
I think it’s also good to remember that the community functions best when everybody is helping to keep everybody else to a particular standard. There can be a risk of over-reliance on waiting for moderators/management to step in instead of addressing things directly (though this is obviously appropriate at times too!), but generally speaking if everyone encourages everyone else to uphold a particular standard then we all benefit and the community self-regulates to a large extent.
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The most problematic thing seems to be one of perception, the (wrong) impression that if someone (usually me) has “Moderator” in bold red next to their name, then there is some expectation that they cannot participate as an ordinary member and express their views as an ordinary member would. Strangely this didn’t seem to be a problem when I had “Benevolent dictator” (heh) next to my name for a couple of years in previous incarnations of the site, but there you go.
It seems to me that no one really objects to the janitorial style duties a moderator has and to me (or anyone else) carrying them out - ie moving the odd thread to dead horses and so on, it’s just the big red label next to my name in contentious discussions, even though I’m not doing anything moderator-y and just participating as a general member.
So perhaps (and this is one for Mark & Robert to discuss) to address this mis-perception those labels should be removed from individual posts for all moderators (Mark, it’s just one line in a template ;) and the moderators can stay listed on the forums home page so people know who they are.
Then when someone is doing something moderator-y, ie editing/moving/deleting something (which is about 1% of the time) they can announce they have their moderators hat on, in bold, and for the other 99% of the time, their general contributions will be seen as those of a normal member (which is indeed what they are), not a “moderator”, who has no sway over a discussion anyway.
Thoughts?