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Online Media Copyright and Fair Use Guidelines How teachers and students can be held accountable to properly use and create online media.
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What is Copyright? O A form of protection for the authors of “original works.” O Published and unpublished works O Work examples: O Literary O Dramatic O Musical
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What is Fair Use? O The right to reproduce or to authorize others to reproduce work. O Four factors to consider: O The purpose and character of your use O The nature of the copyrighted work O The amount and substantiality of the portion taken O The effect of the use upon the potential market
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How Does Copyright and Fair Use Apply to Teachers?
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What Type of Media Can I Use? O Videotapes O DVDs O Multimedia Encyclopedias O Quick Time Movies O Video Clips from the Internet O Pictures O Music
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What’s the Catch? O Teachers and students may use portions of lawfully acquired copyright works in their multimedia project. O Video clips must be contained to 10 percent or three minutes (which ever is less). O The materials must be legitimately acquired (a legal copy). O You must give proper attribution (credit) to the copyright holder.
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How Do I Give Attribution? O Attribution is a thorough “works cited” section of a document or project. O Must be specific. O Bibme.org
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How Do I Remember All This? Cory Watilo (2011) created a mnemonic to remember copyright and fair use guidelines: O Homegrown O Public Domain O Creative Commons O Fair Use
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Homegrown O Your own work O You own the copyright to “homegrown” work O Examples: O Photographs O Home videos
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Public Domain O Shared by everyone O WikiPedia O Can be used for commercial or non- commercial purposes O Use and re-use is unrestricted
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Creative Commons O Provides free licenses to anyone publishing media O Are shared by copyright holders for sharing and use under certain terms O Must comply to the stated Creative Commons terms O Examples: O Images O Audio files O Videos
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Fair Use
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Scenario #1 O A teacher wishes to show a copyrighted motion picture to her class for instructional purposes. Is the teacher protected under the Fair Use Guidelines? O Yes, since it is for classroom instruction and no admission fee is charged.
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Scenario #2 O A student prepares and gives a presentation that displays photographs. Permission was not obtained to use the photographs. Is the student protected under the Fair Use Guidelines? O Yes. Teachers and students may perform and display their own educational projects that contain copyrighted materials for instruction.
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Scenario #3 O A teacher would like to take digital photographs of paintings and share them with her class. Is the teacher protected under the Fair Use Guidelines? O Yes. Photographic reproductions are generally lower-quality and would not likely compete in the same market as the original.
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References O Davidson, H. (2002, October 8). Copyright and Fair Use Guidelines for Teachers. Hall Davidson. Retrieved October 21, 2012, from www.halldavidson.net/copyright_chart.pdf O Fair Use Guidelines for Educational Multimedia. (2002, June 20). ADEC: American Distance Education Consortium | ADEC.edu. Retrieved October 28, 2012, from http://www.adec.edu/admin/papers/fair10-17.html O Fryer, W. (2010, May 20). Fair Use Explained via Disney - A Fair(y) Use Tale. Celebrate Oklahoma Voices. Retrieved October 26, 2012, from lc.celebrateoklahoma.us/video/fair-use-explained-via-disney O Hokansen, K., & Fryer, W. (2011, June 28). Copyright Advice for Teachers from Kristin Hokansen‬â€. YouTube-Broadcast Yourself. Retrieved October 26, 2012, from www.youtube.com/watch?v=g4rTfZOX-IM O Stim, A. R. (n.d.). Stanford Copyright & Fair Use - Measuring Fair Use: The Four Factors. Stanford Copyright & Fair Use Center. Retrieved October 28, 2012, from http://fairuse.stanford.edu/Copyright_and_Fair_Use_Overview/chapter9/9-b.html O U.S. Copyright Office. (n.d.). U.S. Copyright Office. Retrieved October 28, 2012, from http://www.copyright.gov O Watilo, C. (n.d.). Copyright. Playing with Media. Retrieved October 21, 2012, from playingwithmedia.com/pages/copyright
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