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A great place to start… The NAWD website!

Get Connected with NAWD! December 6, 2008 – San Diego, CA Lou Miller – Executive Director, New Jersey Association of Student Councils webmaster@NAWD.com. A great place to start… The NAWD website!. Your online NAWD- ie home, at www.NAWD.com. A great place to start… The NAWD website!.

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A great place to start… The NAWD website!

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  1. Get Connected with NAWD!December 6, 2008 – San Diego, CALou Miller – Executive Director, New Jersey Association of Student Councilswebmaster@NAWD.com

  2. A great place to start… The NAWD website! Your online NAWD-ie home, at www.NAWD.com

  3. A great place to start… The NAWD website! Your online NAWD-ie home, at www.NAWD.com Home page – links to Facebook group, “Reumors”

  4. A great place to start… The NAWD website! Your online NAWD-ie home, at www.NAWD.com Home page – links to Facebook group, “Reumors” Earl Reum Award – current and past honorees

  5. A great place to start… The NAWD website! Your online NAWD-ie home, at www.NAWD.com Home page – links to Facebook group, “Reumors” Earl Reum Award – current and past honorees National Conference – forms and information

  6. A great place to start… The NAWD website! Your online NAWD-ie home, at www.NAWD.com Home page – links to Facebook group, “Reumors” Earl Reum Award – current and past honorees National Conference – forms and information Earl’s Words of Wisdom

  7. A great place to start… The NAWD website! Your online NAWD-ie home, at www.NAWD.com Home page – links to Facebook group, “Reumors” Earl Reum Award – current and past honorees National Conference – forms and information Earl’s Words of Wisdom Parade of Ideas – share yours with “NAWD Nation”!

  8. A great place to start… The NAWD website! Your online NAWD-ie home, at www.NAWD.com Home page – links to Facebook group, “Reumors” Earl Reum Award – current and past honorees National Conference – forms and information Earl’s Words of Wisdom Parade of Ideas – share yours with “NAWD Nation”! Membership – why should you become a “NAWD-ie”?

  9. A great place to start… The NAWD website! Your online NAWD-ie home, at www.NAWD.com Home page – links to Facebook group, “Reumors” Earl Reum Award – current and past honorees National Conference – forms and information Earl’s Words of Wisdom Parade of Ideas – share yours with “NAWD Nation”! Membership – why should you become a “NAWD-ie”? Products Available

  10. A great place to start… The NAWD website! Your online NAWD-ie home, at www.NAWD.com Home page – links to Facebook group, “Reumors” Earl Reum Award – current and past honorees National Conference – forms and information Earl’s Words of Wisdom Parade of Ideas – share yours with “NAWD Nation”! Membership – why should you become a “NAWD-ie”? Products Available Contact NAWD (e-mail Genel or Lou)

  11. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on You can CLICK HERE to visit our NAWD Facebook Group…

  12. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on is an online social utility that helps people communicate more efficiently with their friends, family, and co-workers. You can CLICK HERE to visit our NAWD Facebook Group…

  13. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on is an online social utility that helps people communicate more efficiently with their friends, family, and co-workers. facilitates sharing of information through the social graph – the digital mapping of people’s real-world social (and professional) connections. You can CLICK HERE to visit our NAWD Facebook Group…

  14. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on Who you will find on

  15. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on Who you will find on Currently more than 58 million active users, growing 3% per WEEK with about 250,000 new registrations per DAY.

  16. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on Who you will find on Currently more than 58 million active users, growing 3% per WEEK with about 250,000 new registrations per DAY. 85% of college students are on Facebook, but more than half of all Facebook members are outside of college and the fastest growing Facebook demographic is age 25+

  17. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on Who you will find on Currently more than 58 million active users, growing 3% per WEEK with about 250,000 new registrations per DAY. 85% of college students are on Facebook, but more than half of all Facebook members are outside of college and the fastest growing Facebook demographic is age 25+ In early 2008 Facebook surpassed MySpace as the largest social network in the world. Unlike MySpace, only people in your network and whom you accept as your friends can see your information.

  18. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on Profiles – the foundation of

  19. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on Profiles – the foundation of Basic Information – birthday, hometown, relationship status, political and/or religious views, etc.

  20. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on Profiles – the foundation of Basic Information – birthday, hometown, relationship status, political and/or religious views, etc. Contact Information – e-mail address, websites, etc.

  21. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on Profiles – the foundation of Basic Information – birthday, hometown, relationship status, political and/or religious views, etc. Contact Information – e-mail address, websites, etc. Education and Work – college, graduate school, high school, employer, position, etc.

  22. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on Profiles – the foundation of Basic Information – birthday, hometown, relationship status, political and/or religious views, etc. Contact Information – e-mail address, websites, etc. Education and Work – college, graduate school, high school, employer, position, etc. Groups – that you are a member of in Facebook

  23. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on Profiles – the foundation of Basic Information – birthday, hometown, relationship status, political and/or religious views, etc. Contact Information – e-mail address, websites, etc. Education and Work – college, graduate school, high school, employer, position, etc. Groups – that you are a member of in Facebook You can enter as MUCH or as LITTLE as you want into your personal profile, since a major concern might be…

  24. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on Privacy – things to think about on

  25. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on Privacy – things to think about on Profile information you submit will be available to Facebook users who belong to a network that you allow to access the information through your privacy settings (e.g., school, geography, friends of friends).

  26. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on Privacy – things to think about on Profile information you submit will be available to Facebook users who belong to a network that you allow to access the information through your privacy settings (e.g., school, geography, friends of friends). Your name, network names, and picture thumbnail will be available in search results across the Facebook network and those limited pieces of information may be made available to third party search engines. This is primarily so friends can find you and send friend requests.

  27. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on Privacy – things to think about on Profile information you submit will be available to Facebook users who belong to a network that you allow to access the information through your privacy settings (e.g., school, geography, friends of friends). Your name, network names, and picture thumbnail will be available in search results across the Facebook network and those limited pieces of information may be made available to third party search engines. This is primarily so friends can find you and send friend requests. People who see your name in searches, however, will NOT be able to access your profile information unless they have a relationship to you (friend, friend of friend, member of your networks) that allows such access based on your privacy settings.

  28. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on Websites about privacy (or lack thereof)… http://www.sophos.com/security/best-practice/facebook.html http://blog.mint.com/blog/moneyhack/howto-protect-your-privacy-on-facebook-myspace-and-linkedin/ http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/digitalnatives/2008/10/06/fine-tuning-facebook-a-field-trip-through-privacy-controls/ http://blog.proud-geek.com/2008/05/19/facebook-privacy-are-your-photos-private/

  29. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on Friends – the basic interacting structure of Invite them from webmail address books or IM contact lists Select people you know from your Facebook network Search for them by name or invite friends not on Facebook to join, by e-mail You must invite someone to become a friend, and then they must approve. Only friends (or “friends of friends” if YOU allow – the same applies in the other direction) can see your profile.

  30. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on The HOME PAGE – what’s there… News Feed – shows all status updates, links to posted photo albums, posted items, etc. Status Updates – what are your friends doing? Photos – albums posted by friends Posted Items – web links, Facebook groups, videos, etc. Live Feed – shows posts by friends as they happen

  31. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on The WALL – an interactive place to visit often… Friends can leave you messages Updates on what is happening with your friends Changes made to your Profile Messages – to be private use the INBOX, not the Wall You can delete unwanted or outdated Wall posts NOTE: Anyone with access to your Profile can view your Wall

  32. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on The GROUP – now that we’ve got one…join it!

  33. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on The GROUP – now that we’ve got one…join it! You can be invited by a current Group member, or you can search for group on Facebook and join it (maybe). Types of groups are…

  34. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on The GROUP – now that we’ve got one…join it! You can be invited by a current Group member, or you can search for group on Facebook and join it (maybe). Types of groups are… OPEN – anyone can view the Group page and join the group without approval.

  35. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on The GROUP – now that we’ve got one…join it! You can be invited by a current Group member, or you can search for group on Facebook and join it (maybe). Types of groups are… OPEN – anyone can view the Group page and join the group without approval. CLOSED – anyone can see the Group description, but only members can view the Wall, Discussion Board, Photos, etc. The Group Admin must approve all requests to join the Group.

  36. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on The GROUP – now that we’ve got one…join it! You can be invited by a current Group member, or you can search for group on Facebook and join it (maybe). Types of groups are… OPEN – anyone can view the Group page and join the group without approval. CLOSED – anyone can see the Group description, but only members can view the Wall, Discussion Board, Photos, etc. The Group Admin must approve all requests to join the Group. SECRET – the Group does not appear in any search results or member profiles. Membership is offered by invitation only.

  37. Next, be sure to visit NAWD on The GROUP – once you are in, it’s time to start… Messaging all members of the Group through the Group page Writing on the Group Wall New threads on Group Discussion Boards, and contribute to existing threads already posted Posting photos, links, items, etc. to Group page for whole Group to view NOTE: If you send a message to someone in the Group who is not already a friend – you are then giving them access to your friend list, as well as some of your personal profile, for one month.

  38. Feedback is easy with… SURVEY MONKEY! WEBSITE: www.surveymonkey.com Basic (FREE) accounts are limited in terms of… Number of active surveys How many respondents (100) for each survey How many questions (10) for each survey Use of graphic logos and other visual features Advanced data analysis features Professional Survey Monkey accounts with full features and privileges are $200.00 per year, which may or may not be worth it for you…

  39. Feedback is easy with… SURVEY MONKEY! Let’s look at a sample survey… www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=4pQNYSNcyr8vR_2bw_2bbyEBIA_3d_3d Creating and editing surveys is easy! A FREE basic account is all you need! Collecting responses can be done through inserting a link into an e-mail message or by placing a link on a webpage! Analyzing results is easy, just login to your Survey Monkey account!

  40. Collaborate online… Do you have a WIKI! A Wiki is a collection of web pages interconnected to each other through links. What makes it different than a standard website is that Wikis allow a group of people to enter and continually edit bits or blocks of text. When you come to a wiki, you can read what the wiki’s “community” has written. You can also add or change anything you like in the article you are reading.

  41. Collaborate online… Do you have a WIKI! A Wiki is a collection of web pages interconnected to each other through links. What makes it different than a standard website is that Wikis allow a group of people to enter and continually edit bits or blocks of text. When you come to a wiki, you can read what the wiki’s “community” has written. You can also add or change anything you like in the article you are reading. The most popular Wiki in the world is Wikipedia, which is sort of across between a Wiki and an encyclopedia.

  42. Collaborate online… Do you have a WIKI! A Wiki is a collection of web pages interconnected to each other through links. What makes it different than a standard website is that Wikis allow a group of people to enter and continually edit bits or blocks of text. When you come to a wiki, you can read what the wiki’s “community” has written. You can also add or change anything you like in the article you are reading. The most popular Wiki in the world is Wikipedia, which is sort of across between a Wiki and an encyclopedia. There are hundreds of commercial and free Wiki solutions available… PB Wiki - www.pbwiki.com WikiSpaces – www.wikispaces.com WikiMatrix – compare Wiki site features at www.wikimatrix.org About Wikis on Wikipedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wiki

  43. Collaborate online… Do you have a WIKI! To get a better idea of how a Wiki works, let’s visit Wikipedia and try something…

  44. Collaborate online… Do you have a WIKI! To get a better idea of how a Wiki works, let’s visit Wikipedia and try something… Go to www.wikipedia.org and find a topic that you know something about.

  45. Collaborate online… Do you have a WIKI! To get a better idea of how a Wiki works, let’s visit Wikipedia and try something… Go to www.wikipedia.org and find a topic that you know something about. Search for and read the Wikipedia page about that topic.

  46. Collaborate online… Do you have a WIKI! To get a better idea of how a Wiki works, let’s visit Wikipedia and try something… Go to www.wikipedia.org and find a topic that you know something about. Search for and read the Wikipedia page about that topic. Find something that you feel is missing, or that could be elaborated on.

  47. Collaborate online… Do you have a WIKI! To get a better idea of how a Wiki works, let’s visit Wikipedia and try something… Go to www.wikipedia.org and find a topic that you know something about. Search for and read the Wikipedia page about that topic. Find something that you feel is missing, or that could be elaborated on. Edit the page, adding or changing a sentence or two in the article.

  48. Collaborate online… Do you have a WIKI! To get a better idea of how a Wiki works, let’s visit Wikipedia and try something… Go to www.wikipedia.org and find a topic that you know something about. Search for and read the Wikipedia page about that topic. Find something that you feel is missing, or that could be elaborated on. Edit the page, adding or changing a sentence or two in the article. Submit your change, then return in a few days to see what happens…

  49. Collaborate online… Do you have a WIKI! How will the Wikipedia community react to the change that you made?

  50. Collaborate online… Do you have a WIKI! How will the Wikipedia community react to the change that you made? If the community has no problem with what you wrote, it will probably remain unaltered.

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