China News Service, Wuhan, October 23 (Wang Zhihua) The 14th Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Wetlands (COP14) is about to open in Wuhan. In order to help volunteers improve their service capabilities and levels and help the conference be held smoothly, 300 Wuhan university students On the 23rd, volunteers participated in volunteer professional training through online and offline methods simultaneously.

  The training is divided into 10 lessons, including voluntary service code of conduct, voluntary service etiquette, media publicity and communication, emergency response and first aid skills, interpersonal communication and professional English communication.

  In the first lesson of the training, Qi Huaiyuan, who has served for three consecutive Winter Olympics, shared his experience of volunteering and imparted practical experience of volunteering to college student volunteers.

Afterwards, Guo Binxue, a senior service expert of China Eastern Airlines, brought a class on voluntary service etiquette.

While explaining patiently, Guo Binxue also invited students to demonstrate on stage, and the students under the stage also practiced on the spot and corrected each other's movements.

Guo Binxue explains the etiquette and norms of volunteer service photo by He Xiaogang

  Wu Canyang, a sophomore majoring in polymer materials and engineering at Hubei University of Technology, jots down key points in his notebook from time to time.

He said that the ecological environment is closely related to everyone, and he usually pays more attention to it, so when he heard about the recruitment of volunteers for the "Wetland Conference" this time, he did not hesitate to sign up.

  It is understood that the 300 college student volunteers came from five universities, namely Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan University of Technology, Hubei University of Technology, Wuhan College of Arts and Sciences and Wuhan City Vocational College.

After two rounds of interviews, they stood out from more than 2,000 college students who signed up.

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