Back on March 25, 2010, I collected data regarding the number of fans of the official AFL team Facebook fan pages.  It has been a while and I was curious as to which team had the most growth since the last time I looked.  Did any team do a really good job picking up fans?  Does that have any connection to how well the team did?  (There are a whole bunch of other potential factors.  I just haven’t looked at them.)  The team at the top of the ladder for Facebook fan growth is the Essendom Bombers.  The team at the bottom of the ladder is the Adelaide Crows.  Teams not included didn’t have official pages on March 25, 2010.
| Team | Url | 25-Mar-10 | 3-May-10 | Difference | 
| AFL | https://www.facebook.com/AFL | 88,546 | 99,722 | 11,176 | 
| Essendon Bombers | https://www.facebook.com/Essendon | 44,511 | 52,126 | 7,615 | 
| Collingwood Magpies | https://www.facebook.com/collingwoodfc | 26,314 | 31,366 | 5,052 | 
| Western Bulldogs | https://www.facebook.com/Western.Bulldogs | 0 | 4,930 | 4,930 | 
| Fremantle Dockers | https://www.facebook.com/fremantlefootballclub | 12,939 | 17,513 | 4,574 | 
| St. Kilda Saints | https://www.facebook.com/stkfc | 21,310 | 25,106 | 3,796 | 
| Melbourne Demons | https://www.facebook.com/MELBOURNEfc | 3,159 | 6,278 | 3,119 | 
| Geelong Cats | https://www.facebook.com/GeelongCatsInsider | 1,632 | 4,745 | 3,113 | 
| West Coast Eagles | https://www.facebook.com/pages/West-Coast-Eagles/38862387223 | 33,501 | 36,559 | 3,058 | 
| Port Adelaide Power | https://www.facebook.com/portadelaidefootballclub | 7,892 | 10,815 | 2,923 | 
| Carlton Blues | https://www.facebook.com/OfficialCarltonFC | 12,693 | 14,932 | 2,239 | 
| Richmond Tigers | https://www.facebook.com/Richmond.FC | 4,798 | 6,626 | 1,828 | 
| North Melbourne Kangaroos | https://www.facebook.com/northkangaroos | 9,866 | 11,678 | 1,812 | 
| Hawthorn Hawks | https://www.facebook.com/hawthornfc | 14,342 | 16,129 | 1,787 | 
| Adelaide Crows | https://www.facebook.com/adelaidecrows | 39,546 | 41,246 | 1,700 | 
Is there a correlation between a team’s performance so far this season based on their ladder position and the number of new fans?  No, the correlation is -0.04002 where the Sydney Swans and Brisbane Lions get zero new fans as they do not have a fan page.   If those two teams are removed, -0.10666.  That still is completely random.  The cause for the big increase in fans is not dependent on team performance; other factors must explain the increase in fans.
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    	Tags: 
Adelaide Crows, 
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Brisbane Lions, 
Carlton Blues, 
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Hawthorn Hawks, 
Melbourne Demons, 
North Melbourne Kangaroos, 
Port Adelaide Power, 
Richmond Tigers, 
St Kilda Saints, 
Sydney Swans, 
West Coast Eagles, 
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					I arrived in Australia last week after having applied to and gotten  accepted to University of Canberra.  This acceptance was mid-term,  starting whenever I arrived.  There wasn’t orientation and I sort of had  to do it by feel, but the people at the university were super helpful and nice and made things as painless as possible.  (Ditto for the people at the mobile phone place, the bank and the post office.)  This is based on my experiences so far and may not work for you.    For anyone else going to Australia to do a research  degree, I figured I’d let you know some things I’ve learned at this  waaaay early stage:
- If you have a Masters by coursework, make  sure you can give some sort of equivalent to another Australian degree  (or British or Canadian or anywhere else where they have degrees by  coursework and degrees by research).  Evaluating my existing Masters  caused a hold up in my application as they did not know what to make of  it.
- Check your baggage limits.  United gave me two 50 pound bags  under the plane.  That’s it.  Go over and it costs you $200.  An extra  bag costs you $200.  I’d advise to go heavy on the clothes, shampoo and  books as clothes here feel more expensive than the US and a paperback  book runs between $12 and $20 AUD.  A cheap laptop in the US can run you  $400 but the cheapest I’ve found here is about $550.  (Nicer but still a  much higher price point if you’re on a budget.)
- Get a hold  of the admissions office and research office as soon as you get your  acceptance so you can get your CoE, which you need for your student  visa.  As US loans applied through via FAFSA don’t pay out until you get  there, this can be a major catch 22 as they want payment upfront before  you’re accepted.  To get around this, I faxed them my completed FAFSA  paperwork, which showed I was eligible for US based aid and to what  dollar amount, FAFSA paperwork that had already theoretically been sent  to them when I applied.  They then sent me my CoE and after I completed  the student visa form, I had it in two days.
- Before you  leave, get a hold of your supervisor (mine was awesome at helping move  my application along after it got briefly stuck), tell them when you  will arrive and set a time to meet.  You’ll need to do this to set a  time up to do your plan for your degree.  This plan will need to  eventually get on file with the research department not long after you  start.
- One of the absolute first things to do when you get  on campus is to get your student ID card.  This ID will help you things  like getting a cell phone, opening a bank account and getting a post  office box.   For UC, it also doubles as your library card and contains  the number for your health insurance login.
- After you get an  ID card, set up an appointment with an International Student Advisor.   If you’re entering mid-semester, this is the way to get an orientation  packet, get a list of things you need to do, information on who you  should contact next, where resources are located or ideas on where to  get a bike.
- Find the research department.  They will have  additional paperwork for you to fill out.  They’ll also want a copy of  your passport and possibly some other stuff as part the student visa  work on their side.  If there is a mailing list for research students,  make sure you get on it.  The one for UC has scholarship notifications,  social gathering announcements, training session information, etc.
- Go  through your orientation packet and read it to see what it says.  It  should say things like setting up e-mail, checking to make sure your  research modules are signed up for, etc.  My packet was geared for  undergrads so some of this was confusing.  If you don’t understand  everything in the packet and you think you should, ask for help.  At UC,  everyone has been beyond nice and helpful and accommodating.
- When  you first meet with your supervisor, find out about the library and if  there is some one in the library that research students in your  department work with.  If there is, schedule an appointment with them.   At mine, I learned all the major databases, how to get access to them,  how many days I can check out books, how I can get access to resources  not provided inside the library already, signed up for a SCOPUS training  session and checked out books related to doing a degree by research in  Australia.
- Get an Australian bank account.  This will give  you a proof of address, which will be necessary for other things like a  cell phone.  You don’t need to prove where you live, just tell them your  address.  (I went with WestPac as my bank as I can take out money free  from Bank of America there and easily transfer funds.  It just seemed  easier.  There is a bank on campus here, that is advertised in the  International Student Orientation packet.)  Bring your passport with you  and proof that you have a student visa.  I printed out my online  confirmation and that worked.  There are no overdraft fees here, or at  least WestPac doesn’t have them.  (I boggled.)
- Health  insurance is a requirement of your student visa: You  need it.  US aid won’t pay out right away.  When  you get to campus, you’ll need to find the person in charge of this and  see about buying at least 3 months worth of health coverage until your  US aid kicks in.  I think that is around $130 AUD.  Could be a bit  less.  If your US aid kicks in pro-actively for health coverage from  when you started, the amount you paid out of pocket will be refunded to  you.  You just need to fill out paperwork.
- You can get a  pre-paid or post paid plan.  If you’re going with a plan, you need to  have a copy of your student visa, your passport, a credit card, and  proof of your address.  Cell phone plans are generally two years so they  need proof that you’ll be in the country that long.  You don’t pay your  cell phone bill until well, you get the first bill.  (This confused  me.  I walked out of the store with a phone that worked but I hadn’t  paid the shop anything.) You can pay in the  store or online.  Data plans feel pretty affordable. I’m getting a fair  amount of minutes, 500 MB transfer, free facebook, twitter and YouTube  for around $49 AUD a month for an iPhone.  I’m paying the iPhone up  front for $280 AUD instead of tacking on cost of it for each month.
- Post  office boxes are handy to have for things like cell phone bills, bank  statements, for the university keeping in touch with you and getting  absentee ballots from the US.  Mine cost around $87 AUD for 11 months.
- Don’t buy a new bike if  you’re looking for one.  Ask around to see who has them.  I got a used  one from my supervisor for $30 AUD, cheaper than my bike helmet at $37  AUD.  (Bike helmets are required by law here.)
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