Statements A, B, D and E present realistic benefits and governance needs of social media in higher education, while C and F are exaggerated or false. Social media can foster peer interaction, networking and supplementary communication when guided by institutional policies. Course-specific groups can support, but not replace, formal LMS structures. Claims that social media guarantees accuracy or must be used in every course are not justified, so the combination limited to A, B, D and E is correct.
Option A:
Option A is correct because it includes all and only the statements that recognise both the potential and the limitations of social media in education. It selects A and B as legitimate pedagogical uses, D as a governance necessity and E as a complementary role, to form a coherent set. By excluding C and F, it avoids the assumptions that social media is always accurate or universally mandatory.
Option B:
Option B is incorrect because it includes C, which wrongly states that information on social media is automatically accurate and peer-reviewed. Although A, B and D are true, adding C introduces a misleading view of content quality. This combination therefore cannot represent the correct set of statements.
Option C:
Option C is incorrect because it accepts F, which insists that social media must always be used in all courses. While B, D and E may be acceptable, F ignores contextual differences such as access, discipline and learner needs, making the option incorrect overall.
Option D:
Option D is incorrect because it includes both C and F along with several true statements. By accepting the ideas that social media guarantees quality and is compulsory everywhere, this option mixes accurate observations with strong and unjustified claims.
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