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Colleges and Facebook: Friend a Professor or Let Your Account Be Monitored

Chances are, youve heard the warnings about keeping your online image clean. Drunken party photos or suggestive status updates on your Facebook timeline could hinder your chances of being admitted to your dream college.

Think it wont happen to you? Think again. Eighty-five percent of Kaplan Test Preps 2011 participants said that their school uses Facebook to help recruit students. Nearly one-quarter of the respondents admitted to visiting an applicants Facebook page to learn more about them.

Just How Private is Private?

You never know who will see or read something youve posted online. Even making your profile visible to friends only may not keep you in the clear. Facebook does have that allow users to share photos and other content with certain friends while blocking it from others, but the policies can change at any time with little or no notice. In short, you never know who will find a picture of you on the Internet or what theyll do with it.

Bob Sullivan of MSBNCs The Red Tape Chronicles caused a stir with his recent on the topic.

Colleges Demand Student Athletes Friend a Coach

At many colleges and universities across the United States, student athletes are now required to friend a coach or compliance officer to ensure that a school official has access to all of the students Facebook posts and photos. The practice isnt voluntaryif the student wants to play for the team, they must do as they are told.

Social Network Monitoring

Other schools use social network monitoring services like which scrutinizes student athletes Facebook, Twitter, MySpace and YouTube accounts for risqu矇 or obscene posts or photo comments, supposedly to help prevent a public relations catastrophe should such information be leaked to the press. Kevin Long, the UDiligence CEO, told that his company is essentially performing what has become the new credit check, background check, or drug test when going in for a job.

explains that college athletics departments using UDilligance receive emails when any words found on the UDiligence no-no list, for lack of a better term, are found in registered students online profiles. The words are categorized by alcohol, drugs, sex, violence or general/racial, which includes profane words. The list is updated regularly.

Some of the words that are clean enough to include in this blog post include alcohol, cocaine, doobie, gun, condoms and weed. The list even includes misspellings and abbreviations to help catch students who intentionally try to outsmart the system and keep their accounts from being flagged.

Against the Constitution?

紼勳硃鳥勳s reports that along with other opponents of the practice, Washington, DC-based lawyer Bradley Shear feels that schools have no right to monitor students social media accounts and are violating the First Amendment in the process. Maryland legislators have already proposed bills that would ban social media access by schools and potential employers. Shear believes a federal law should also be in place.

What do you think?

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Melissa Rhone earned her Bachelor of Music in Education from the 911勛圖厙 of Tampa. She resides in the Tampa Bay area and enjoys writing about college, pop culture, and epilepsy awareness.