1. facebook
• Facebook
is
the
most
popular
social
networking
site,
with
over
1
billion
users
worldwide.
• As
Forbes
magazine
pointed
out
in
May
2012,
In
8
years
Facebook
changed
the
way
we
do
things
online.
http://www.fastcompany.com/1837657/8-years-facebook-changed-all-we-do-
online
2. facebook
There
are
two
ways
to
have
a
presence
on
Facebook
–
you
can
have
one
or
the
other
or
both.
1) have
a
personal
account.
2) have
a
professional
or
business
page.
3. facebook
• With
personal
account(1),
you
have
reciprocal
friendships
with
other
Facebook
members
and
can
join
(or
establish)
Facebook
groups.
• PLUS
you
have
the
ability
to
create
professional
or
business
pages
(2)
associated
with
that
account.
4. facebook
• With
(2)
you
do
not
establish
“friendships”
with
Facebook
members,
rather
other
Facebook
members
can
simply
“like”
your
page
in
which
case,
posOngs
on
your
page
will
appear
in
their
personal
acOvity
streams.
• Facebook
pages
are
also
visible
to
non-‐Facebook
members.
• If
you
set
up
a
Facebook
page,
you
can
later
convert
your
Facebook
business
page
into
a
personal
account
if
you
like.
5. facebook
• Note,
that
Facebook’s
terms
and
condiOons
state
that
you
can
not
have
more
than
one
personal
account,
although
you
can
set
up
mulOple
Facebook
pages.
7. Privacy
seSngs
•
If
you
are
going
to
use
your
personal
account
for
connecOng
with
both
personal
friends
and
professional
and
other
contacts,
you
will
need
to
be
very
clear
about
who
sees
what
in
your
account.
• How
to
lock
down
Facebook
privacy,
Mashable,
9
July
2013
http://mashable.com/2013/07/09/facebook-privacy-how-to/
8. How
to
communicate
on
Facebook
• You
can
write
a
status
update
–
This
will
be
viewable
by
those
you
have
selected
in
your
privacy
seSngs.
• A
status
message
can
be
up
to
400
characters
long.
Your
friends
can
comment
on
your
status
update,
show
that
they
like
the
update
and/or
share
it
with
others.
9. How
to
communicate
on
Facebook
• You
can
write
on
a
friend’s
wall
–
Note:
this
is
not
a
private
message
and
may
be
visible
by
others.
• You
can
send
your
colleague
a
private
message
-‐
Select
Send
X
a
message
on
their
profile
page.
• You
can
live
chat
with
a
friend
-‐
In
the
bo]om
right-‐
hand
corner
of
the
screen
is
the
chat
window
which
will
tell
you
the
number
of
your
friends
online.
11. • Facebook
groups
are
open,
closed
or
secret
(invisible)
spaces
for
groups
of
individuals
to
private
conversaOons
and
discussions
–
but
note,
group
members
do
all
have
to
be
Facebook
members.
• h]ps://www.facebook.com/groups/groupsatewha/
12. To
join
a
group
• To
locate
a
group
of
interest,
you
could
search
for
a
group
by
typing
a
keyword
into
Search.
Groups
you
are
a
member
of
are
displayed
in
the
le_
nav
bar
of
your
Home
page.
13. To
set
up
your
own
group
• in
the
le_-‐hand
menu
of
your
Home
page,
select
the
Create
group
under
Groups,
and
then
work
through
the
screens
providing
informaOon
about
your
group.
• You
will
need
to
decide
the
privacy
seSngs
of
your
group:
Open,
Closed
or
Secret.
Note,
you
will
need
to
add
members
to
your
group
before
it
is
created.
15. • Individuals,
businesses
and
other
organizaOons
can
set
up
Facebook
pages
(EITHER
in
addiOon
to
a
personal
account
OR
instead
of
a
personal
account),
(e.g.
to
promote
or
market
their
services,
event
or
book
or
just
for
discussion
around
topic
areas.)
• If
others
want
to
comment
on
posOngs
that
appear
on
such
pages,
as
well
as
receive
the
feeds
from
the
page
in
your
own
newsfeed
page,
they
click
the
”Like”
bu]on,
which
will
mean
that
they
then
become
a
“fan”
of
the
page.
16. • Note:
Facebook
pages
are
visible
outside
Facebook,
which
means
that
even
those
who
are
not
Facebook
members
can
also
view
them,
although
they
do
need
to
be
a
member
to
“like”
them
and
comment
on
them.
17. CreaOng
a
Facebook
Page
• SeSng
up
a
professional
page
is
a
useful
way
of
keeping
your
personal
and
professional
lives
separate;
in
other
words
you
could
use
your
personal
account
for
keeping
in
touch
with
friend
and
for
personal
acOviOes,
and
a
Facebook
page
for
your
professional
acOviOes.
18. CreaOng
a
Facebook
Page
• If
you
are
already
a
Facebook
user,
you
can
set
up
your
own
Facebook
page,
select
More
beside
Pages
(on
the
le_-‐hand
menu
on
your
Home
page),
and
then
click
the
Create
a
Page
bu]on.
• If
you
are
not
a
Facebook
user
and
you
only
want
to
have
a
Facebook
page,
you
can
set
up
your
page
from
the
main
facebook.com
page
by
selecOng
Create
a
Page
link
underneath
the
Sign
up
bu]on
–
in
other
words,
don’t
go
through
the
sign
up
details
provided
on
that
page.
19. CreaOng
a
Facebook
Page
• You
can
set
up
as
many
Pages
as
you
want,
and
you
can
have
as
many
administrators
of
your
page
as
you
like.
21. Facebook
and
educaOon
and
training
• Students
have
used
Facebook
for
a
long
Ome
now
to
connect
with
one
another
socially,
as
well
as
to
work
together
in
study
groups.
• Many
educators
now
appreciate
that
as
around
80%
of
their
students
are
already
on
Facebook,
they
should
take
educaOon
to
them,
rather
than
expect
the
students
to
come
to
their
educaOonal
systems.
22. Facebook
and
educaOon
and
training
In
fact
some
research
by
Dr
Rey
Junco,
showed
College
students
prefer
to
use
Facebook
in
their
courses:
http://blog.reyjunco.com/college-students-prefer-to-use-facebook-in-their-
courses
“Almost
every
student
in
our
sample
gave
us
a
variant
of
the
same
answer:
all
their
friends/
classmates
are
on
Facebook,
and
it’s
easy
to
use.
In
other
words,
Facebook
has
the
user
base
in
order
to
make
academic
conversaOons
useful.
Plus,
since
students
are
“always”
on
Facebook,
it’s
easy
to
see
when
new
comments
are
made
to
a
post
from
a
class.
Some
of
my
research
has
shown
that
how
students
use
Facebook
is
someOmes
more
important
than
Ome
spent
on
the
site
in
terms
of
grades
and
student
engagement.
Therefore,
college
faculty
have
an
opportunity
to
engage
students
using
Facebook
and
to
help
them
use
the
site
for
educaOonal
good.”
23. Facebook
and
educaOon
and
training
Some
teachers
even
use
a
Facebook
group
as
their
LMS,
see
these
arOcles
for
more
on
this:
• Facebook
groups
as
LMS:
a
case
study
October
2012
http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/1294/2295
• Using
a
Facebook
group
as
a
LMS,
2
August
2012
https://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=10150244221815570
24. Perdue’s
Hotseat
systems.
Perdue
uses
Facebook
credenOals
as
a
connector/login
to
other
systems
–
meaning
that
students
don’t
need
to
have
separate
usernames
and
passwords.
h]p://www.youtube.com/watch?
feature=player_embedded&v=Wz6TUhcGf6s