Appointment:
Senior high school monitor is sometimes appointed by teachers and sometimes elected by classmates. A formal university monitor must be elected.
Impression:
The monitor of Grade Three in Senior High School may become everyone's hero, at least knowing what he has done. A university can't produce a hero, and a few people know what he has done.
Rights and obligations:
Both of them represent the class collective, and are responsible for leading the class committee, accepting teachers' tasks and assigning tasks. High school is suspected of being a handyman, while universities are quite formal.
A high school monitor can be understood as a public servant. A university monitor can be understood as a public servant plus a privileged person.
Both of them need to do a lot of work, but the monitor of the university is close to the assistant counselor (assistant counselor), counselor, class teacher, secretary of the League branch, etc., so it is easier to get student loans, grants, tickets for lectures, registration qualifications for practical activities, etc. He has the right to call class meeting fees.
Daily work:
High school monitor:
(Teacher) "Class"-(Monitor) "Stand up"
"I started reading English very early today ... where is the English teacher? Not here? What about Chinese substitutes? "
(Teacher) "Find someone to move books in the library"-(stationmaster) "From No.65438 +0 1 to No.65438+05"-(classmate) No.65438+015 "Foot pain" and "My period"
University monitor:
Here comes the leader. Take the lead in clapping. ....
(Teacher) "Send the list to my email" —— (Monitor) "Oh!" "Academic committee, remember?"
"We have five student loan places. Who will the class Committee vote for? "
"Check the dormitory tonight, pack your things quickly and put them in the cupboard. The mosquito net should be ..."
(Monitor) "Student Union, how many people are here today? The teacher asked me ... "-(Student Union)" About half ... "
"The theme of today's class meeting is ..."
"Propaganda committee, write a notice, absent more than ..."
"Where's my lunch box?"