New student feature guides
These new guides explain the latest skill tag, smart note, auto-checking and review-by-exception features in plain English.
Master Student Leaders: Train, Lead and Support Newer Students
Experienced students can help newer helpers learn safely, lead Team Up work, review outcomes and build leadership proof.

What students can gain
- Master Student Leaders pathway explained with practical examples
- How real student activity becomes proof
- Employability skills students can describe
- Safe join and guidance next steps
How this feature works in real student life
These examples show the difference between reading about a feature and seeing how it can help a student build confidence, communication and future job proof.
Training example
A master student shows a newer helper how to ask scoping questions before a task starts.
Team Up example
A leader splits a project into roles: customer update, admin notes, practical help and follow-up.
Review example
After a task, the leader helps the student reflect on what happened and write honest proof.
Why this matters for students
A master student pathway gives experienced students a meaningful next step. Instead of only doing tasks themselves, they can support newer students, help split Team Up roles, review proof and model safe boundaries. This builds leadership and people-management evidence.
Feature flow: from activity to employability proof
Students get the most value when each task is clear, safe and connected to learning. A small task can become useful proof when the student understands the role, records the outcome and reflects on what skill it shows.
- Lead safely: The master student supports, guides and encourages rather than taking over.
- Review and sign off: They help newer students pause, reflect and improve.
- Leadership proof: Team coordination and people management become live-resume evidence.
Example student journey
A student might start with one small task, such as helping at a campus desk, following up a referral, supporting a simple tech question, helping with an event, or joining a small Team Up project. The important part is not that the task is big. The important part is that the student can explain the situation, the role they played, the result, and what skill it shows.
For example, a non-technical student could help promote a campus support offer, answer basic questions, record enquiries, and send a follow-up message. That can show communication, admin, marketing and customer support skills. A practical student could help with a simple device or software task, stay inside boundaries, ask for guidance when needed, and turn the outcome into a skill tag or live-resume note.
This is the difference between a thin resume claim and useful proof. A thin claim says, “I am organised.” A stronger student example says, “I helped coordinate a small campus support task, checked who needed help, kept notes, followed up with people, and learned how to communicate clearly when the task changed.”
What students should record after each task
- The problem or request: what the person, campus group or customer needed.
- The student role: what the student actually did, without exaggerating.
- The safety step: where the student used boundaries, guidance, approval or a clear handover.
- The outcome: what improved, what was completed, or what was referred to someone else.
- The employability skill: communication, organisation, customer support, admin, marketing, project work, people management or practical tech help.
- The proof: review, note, skill tag, live-resume entry, project reflection or referral activity.
How leadership proof is built
Leadership proof comes from small repeatable actions: explaining expectations, checking work, supporting a nervous student, handling a question calmly and knowing when to ask for guidance. Those examples matter because they show maturity and responsibility.
Employability skills this hub helps build
Workplace habits
Students practise communication, organisation, admin notes, customer updates, task scoping, follow-up and guidance requests.
Interview-ready examples
Instead of saying they are reliable or good with people, students can explain what happened, what they did, what feedback they received and what they learned.
Guides in this hub
Choose a guide based on the next question you have. Each page connects practical activity with safety, guidance and live-resume proof.
How to Become a Master Student Helper
Lead with patience, not ego. For experienced students who can train, lead, review and encourage newer student helpers safely.
Open guide →GuideHow to Build Leadership Proof for Your Live Resume
Turn mentoring into real career proof. For experienced students who can train, lead, review and encourage newer student helpers safely.
Open guide →GuideHow to Lead Student Tech Help Teams
Keep team jobs clear and calm. For experienced students who can train, lead, review and encourage newer student helpers safely.
Open guide →GuideMentor Scripts for Student Tech Jobs
Use simple words when a student is unsure. For experienced students who can train, lead, review and encourage newer student helpers safely.
Open guide →GuideHow Review and Sign-Off Protect Student Work
Help students improve before claiming proof. For experienced students who can train, lead, review and encourage newer student helpers safely.
Open guide →GuideHow to Train Less Experienced Students Safely
Show newer students how to practise safely. For experienced students who can train, lead, review and encourage newer student helpers safely.
Open guide →Where to go next
Join the student pathway
Choose the pathway that fits you: campus help, support, referrals, Team Up, leadership or practical tech help.
Skill tagsSee how skill recognition works
Learn how real activity can turn into skill tags and proof students can explain.
EmployabilityBuild project and people skills
Explore how student work can build organisation, project management and people-management evidence.
Ready to choose your next step?
Start from the student join page, or return to the full gateway to compare help, campus, referral, Team Up and leadership pathways.
