but is it worth it you reckon? i havnt really done anything for the school except basketball every year which satisfies the two terms minimum so ..mayb this might help in the long run i dont know
is it worth it? thats a question you have to ask yourself. are you willing to go above and beyond what you're required to do for the school? many of my friends are prefects and i know perfectly well what kind of schedule you'll get if you're a prefect. most days you dont get some kind of meeting or whatever, but when school events come up (carnivals, founders day [if you even have such a day], speech night etc) the work piles up like crazy.
my friend is the school captain and she has now taken to refering herself as the school's mule. in a way she is right - she has to do practically everything now, and if anything fucks up its her responsibility. but again do you regard the resulting rewards enough to compensate? Do you LIKE working to develop your school further? Will you willingly give up your own time for the school? for your teachers? will you slog hard not just for the school but also for your HSC?
btw - many of my friends are academics and they hold a prefect position. they need to work on aiding the school develop further as a community as well as pulling their weight in the HSC and working hard for their marks as well.
i'm not saying its impossible but if you have a notion that prefects do nothing all the time and just bum around enjoying the status of 'prefect' then you are wrong. get that idea out of your head right now.
oh and also know that teachers have a say in the votes too. so if you havent been very involved in school community in the past your chances of getting a prefect position will be severly limited (even if the votes stack in your favour. eg: someone who has demonstrated school sprit in the pass who may have slightly less votes than you MAY get the position). Not saying the process is rigged, but you do need to have a track record of
commitment and
dedication to the school.
in the end the school/teachers/year co-ordinators want what is best for the school and they want prefects
who will also want the best for the school even at the cost of personal time and or cost. because of this inherent cost, you must be prepared to give up just about everything you can. your time especially must be sacrificed should the teachers need you to.
Case in point: my friend is a massive twilight fan - she wanted so desperately to attend the preview screening of twilight a few weeks before offical release but she could not go to the screening (even tho she had friends who had reserved a ticket for her) simply because that very same night we had speech night and she as school captain could not simply 'skip' this event in favour of something she really wanted to do.
Be sure of what you know you'll be sacrificing. if its just all for a "prefect of [insert title]" on your resume then i have to tell you right now its not worth it.
But if its because you genuinely believe you've got something to offer the school and you have a real interest and care in the school then go for it.
Sincerity always wins votes.