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Professors log on to Facebook

Kasey Minnick

Issue date: 10/20/06 Section: A & E
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Associate professor of English and communications Cathy Yungmann checks up on her facebook account.
Associate professor of English and communications Cathy Yungmann checks up on her facebook account.

One of the biggest crazes on college campuses when you become a freshman is to get your very own Facebook account. But now it may not be "so cool" because one of your very first professors at college may have it too.

Facebook is one of the most popular sites among college students. Being very different from MySpace, you cannot create your own backdrops, have music play or post surveys about yourself, but you can add unlimited pictures of yourself and the memories you have made.

To get Facebook you need school identification, so it is not as easy to get Facebook as it is a MySpace account, which is a reason why some students like it better. But say you attend a crazy party and take tons upon tons of pictures. You get on your computer and upload them all to Facebook, creating a new album. This may get all of your friends laughing and reminiscing about the past nights' events, but what would it make you feel like if your college professors see those same pictures?

Sophomore English communications major Kelly Moorehead said, "No, I don't hesitate putting up pictures that I'm scared of professors seeing. To be honest, I never thought about it."

Former General Manager of WYBF, Communication center supervisor for the English and communications department and graduate of the Class of 2005 Craig Vagell Jr. said, "Facebook was given to college students and others as a tool to be able to network with long distance friends and people whom you may have never met. By placing offensive language or pictures on a wall or profile will only in return hurt your reputation and could potentially jeopardize a future job with a company."

As Vagell said, people get Facebook to stay in touch with many others from other colleges or simply get it to make new friends, but many students feel that only students should have an account.

Freshman accounting major Nick Swaitz said, "I don't have Facebook, but if I did, I would feel violated. I would not want any of my teachers to have this."

Freshman marketing major Mike Kroener said, "If my teachers got Facebook, it would suck. I would be pissed and scared that I would get in trouble for postings."

But, for all you students that have Facebook, don't get paranoid that your professors are just logging-on to see what you are up to. There are teachers that don't bother with Facebook.
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Julie Ann Brown

posted 2/01/08 @ 5:32 PM EST

Faculty will either be the creative communicators in this new communication tool and toy with our students...or we will be left behind. Viva FACEBOOK!

Tenured Professor of Marketing
Harvard of Community Colleges
Santa Barbara City College

Alfred Litton

posted 8/21/08 @ 7:00 PM EST

I have facebook and, honestly, couldn't care less what my students post on their accounts. Some invite me to befriend them. I usually say yes, but have little interest in viewing their photos or life philosophies. (Continued…)

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