Problem: Write an article based on this summary: Open Facebook. Find the post you want to share. Make sure that you can share the post. Click Share. Select a sharing option. Add text to your post if necessary. Click Post.

Answer: Go to https://www.facebook.com/ in your computer's web browser. This will open your News Feed if you're logged in. If you aren't logged in, enter your email address and password before proceeding. Scroll down until you find in your News Feed the post you want to share. You can also go to the profile of the person who shared the post and find it there. Not all posts can be shared. If the person who created the post has their privacy settings set to "Friends" or "Friends of Friends", you won't be able to share their post. Look for a Share button below the post; if you see one, you can share the post. The original post's creator's security settings will still influence the sharing options you have. It's below the post. Doing so prompts a drop-down menu. In the drop-down menu, click one of the following options (you won't always see all of these options):   Share Now (Friends) — Immediately shares the post to your timeline without adding any text.  Share... — Opens the post in a "New Post" window in which you can add text (e.g., commentary).  Share as Message — Opens a Messenger window in which you can specify a friend (or a group of friends) to whom you want to send the post.  Share on a friend's timeline — Opens a "New Post" window in which you can specify a friend's timeline as the posting location.  Share to a Page — Opens a "New Post" window in which you can share the post as one of the pages you manage. If you're creating a new post on your wall, sharing via Messenger, or sharing on a page or a friend's timeline, you can enter a message or tag people in the top text field in the "New Post" window.  If you're sharing the post via Messenger, you'll need to enter a friend's name in the "To" text box. If you're sharing the post on a page you manage, you'll have to select the page in the top-left corner of the "New Post" window. If you're posting the shared content on a friend's timeline, enter the friend's name into the "Friends" text box at the top of the window. If you added text to the shared content, this button will be in the bottom-right corner of the window. Doing so posts the shared item. If you're sending the post via a message, you'll click Send here instead.


Problem: Write an article based on this summary: Don’t play favorites. Follow your own rules. Show an interest in the material. Admit your mistakes. Ask for feedback from older students. Be encouraging.

Answer: Of course, it can be nearly impossible not to play favorites when you’re teaching a class with a student who is always falling asleep or texting sitting next to another student who is hanging on to your every word. When it comes time to give grades, students will be properly evaluated, but when you’re interacting with your students in the classroom, you’ll have to do the best you can to hide your biases so that you can foster a positive classroom environment.  Try to call on all students equally, and not to make a point of praising the high-achieving students too much, or the other students will feel left out. If you are short with a student who hasn’t been impressing you, then he won’t be motivated to change. This one is pretty straight forward. If you tell your students not to be late to class, don’t be late to class. If you have a no-cell phone policy, keep your phone off during class. If you tell your kids they can’t eat in the classroom, don’t chow down half a sandwich in the middle of a presentation. If you fall into this kind of behavior, your students will think of you as a hypocrite and will lose respect for you. What’s more, you’ll be modeling behavior that suggests it’s okay for your students to break the rules. If you’ve broken one of your own rules, make a point of apologizing for it. Whether you’re teaching organic chemistry or basic grammar, if you don’t care about the course material, then nobody else will. You have to show that you’re excited about The War of 1812, The Canterbury Tales, factoring equations, or whatever it is you’re teaching that day. Your enthusiasm will be infectious and will show students the importance of caring about what they’re learning. If you act bored or sick of the same old material, then the students will follow suit. One of your goals, as a teacher, should be to show your students what it’s like to have a passion for a certain subject. Your enthusiasm can lead them to develop a passion for your favorite subject, too, and this will be a great achievement. This one is a bit tricky. You want your students to see you as the person with all the answer and the guy who administers the tests. However, sometimes things do go wrong — maybe you forgot an important point in the lesson, maybe one of your test questions didn’t add up, or maybe you promised you’d have your students’ essays back on time and didn’t get to them. If these situations arise, you should tell your students that you’ve made a mistake and move forward from there. Swallowing your pride for thirty seconds will be worth it in the long run, because they’ll see that they’re fallible, too. Of course, this doesn’t mean that you should allow students to question your every move, or for grade-grubbing students to go over every little part of every little exam with you. Find a balance between being open to admitting errors and not letting students question everything you do. Though asking a class of third graders what they think of your lesson plans may not yield the best results, you can become a better teacher and a great role model if you ask older students for feedback about your teaching and lesson planning. If you're a college teacher, for example, asking for feedback at the end of your class can help you do your job better the next time around and will show your students that your ideas aren't set in stone and that you're flexible. Of course, it's a fine balance. You have to be aware of what's good for your students, even if it's not the most fascinating material, and which lessons are useless because your students don't actually learn anything. If you want to be a good role model, then you should encourage your students to do well and to work harder in school. If they’re struggling, then help them after school, give them additional resources, or give them extensive feedback on their essays to help them improve. When they show improvement, make sure you give them the praise they deserve. This models the idea of improvement and shows students that they can be better than they are; if you make a habit of being encouraging to good students and dismissive of weaker students, then you’ll make students think that there’s no room for improvement.  To be a good role model, you shouldn’t make students feel bad for performing poorly, or to praise high-achieving students too much. Instead, you should talk about how the subject matter can be quite difficult and leave room for questions so students can clear up anything they don’t understand. Being encouraging about your student’s progress will make you a good role model because giving them a drive to succeed in your class can also help them apply this determination to other realms of their life. Also, keep in mind that unfortunately, not all students get help or encouragement at home. Giving them a positive role model who offers encouragement can give them hope for the rest of their lives.


Problem: Write an article based on this summary: Change the canvas size. Adjust the color. Create the different icon sizes. Examine your layers. Save the image as an icon. Use the icon.

Answer:
Click Image → Canvas Size. In the window that appears, click the chain icon to unlink the width and the height. Change the canvas size to a size that shows the subject well, and ensure that both width and height are set to the same number.  Use the Offset values to center the image in your new canvas before clicking the Resize button. Once you've resized the image, right-click on the layer and select "Layer to Image Size". This will change the layer boundary to match the canvas size. If you want, you can use GIMP's color tools to change the coloration of the image. The easiest way to do this is to click Color → Colorize and then play with the settings until you find the color you feel looks best. The final step in creating an icon is ensuring that the image supports all the different icon sizes. This is essential if you want to be able to use the icon in different areas of the operating system and want them to scale when icon size is increased or decreased.  Copy the layer. Click the Layer in the Layers window and press Ctrl+C. Scale the original layer. Open the Scale tool by pressing ⇧ Shift+T and change the image scale to 256 X 256 px. Click Image → Fit Canvas to Layers. (Note: if you are creating the icon set for OS X, start with a 512 X 512) Create the first copy. Press Ctrl+V to paste the layer. Click Layer → To New Layer. Open the Scale tool and change the size to 128 X 128. Create the second copy. Press Ctrl+V to paste the layer. Click Layer → To New Layer. Open the Scale tool and change the size to 48 X 48. Create the third copy. Press Ctrl+V to paste the layer. Click Layer → To New Layer. Open the Scale tool and change the size to 32 X 32. Create the fourth copy. Press Ctrl+V to paste the layer. Click Layer → To New Layer. Open the Scale tool and change the size to 16 X 16. You should have 5 layers, each one with an image smaller than the last. If any of them look blurry, open the Sharpening Tool by clicking Filters → Enhance → Sharpen. Adjust the slider until the image is clearer. Click File → Export. In the Export Image window, change the extension in the top field to ".ico" and choose a location to save the icon. A window will appear, asking if you want to compress any of the layers. Check the box to compress the two biggest layers, unless you are using Windows XP. Once you've exported the image into .ico format, you can use it to replace the icon for any file or folder you'd like.  See this guide for changing the icons on your Windows computer. See this guide for changing the icons on your Mac OS X computer. You will need to use a free online converter to change the ICO file to an ICNS file (Mac's icon file format).