Post on 22-Dec-2014
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About By: Noe GanadoTST – Besteiro Middle School
0Copyright law grants the sole right to publish, reproduce, sell, display, perform and prepare derivative works of their original works.
0Copyrighted material can be used without permission only in a few situations.
Fair UseOf Copyrighted Materials
Schools can use any copyrighted material
since they are a school
Using copyright material is ok if you don’t make a
profit
Anything on the Internet is in the public domain
As long as the material is used for “the good of the
students”
Copyright It’s important that we know copyright and that we teach it to our students &
teachers…………………………….
To promote creativity, innovation and the spread of knowledge
Article 1 Section 8 U.S. Constitution
Copyright is the legal right granted to an author, a composer, a playwright, a publisher, or a
distributor to exclusive publication, prodruction, sale, or distribution of a literary, musical, dramatic,
or artistic work.
No copyright protection available for the following type of work: Facts, Ideas/Theories, Short Phrases, U.S. Government Works
How it Works In Public Domain
0Creative material that are not protected by intellectual property laws such as copyright, trademark or patent laws
0Expiration of copyright0Failure to renew
copyright0Dedication-The owner
deliberately places it in the public domain.
Public Domain
What is protected?
0Works that are original0Works that are written
or recorded in a fixed form: Research Projects, Writings you produce,
Fair Use
0The Character or purpose of your use
0The nature of the material being used
0The effect your use will have on the market value for the original material
0The amount of the work that will be used
Factors to Consider……
0 Material Factual0 Material Published0 Market Value Difficult to
Obtain0 Market Value Users will
seek full work0 Amount used Excerpt0 Amount used Relevant to
lesson
0Fictional0Unpublished0Renders purchasing
pointless0Easily-licensed0Entirely0Heart of the Work
Fair Use
In Education
0Section II0 of copyright law allows public education to display or perform copyrighted material as long as it occurs during face-to-face teaching, the material has been lawfully obtained, and there is no profit being made
0When working on a research you must either be fair or you must have permission. Also, be sure to always cite materials you do use appropriately.
Get Permission
Author, Publisher or other
Beneficiary
Send Letter, Form, or Copyright
Clearance
Portion of Material Being
Used
How it will be used
Frequency of your use Wait for Response
If No, Use “Fair Use” or Choose
New Work
Permission
Creative Commons Licenses….• Grants users permission to use a
work in specific ways• Allows for community creation &
adaptation• Creative Common License take
precedence over copyright
Creative Commons
Plan to show a video as a reward to students…
Use an DLP to enlarge a character for display purpose…..
Use software CD on more than one computer….
Find clipart online & add it to a PowerPoint….
Copy pages for all of your students
Request written permission to use someone else’s work……
If You……….
Think About…………
Work CitedColourbox. (2012, 01 01). Colourbox. Retrieved 01 29, 2012, from http://www.colourbox.com/media/2652959
Commons, C. (2012, 01 01). Creative Commons. Retrieved 01 29, 2012, from http://creativecommons.org/about
Commons, W. (2008, 02 20). Wikimedia Commons. Retrieved 01 29, 2012, from LuMaxArt Gold Guys:http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:LuMaxArt_Gold_Guys_With_Creative_Commons_Symbol. Jpg
course, C. C. (2001, 01 01). Copyright Crash course. Retrieved 01 29, 2012, from http://copyright.lib.utexas.edu/
Dreamstime. (2000, 01 01). Dreamstime. Retrieved 01 29, 2012, from http://www.dreamstime.com/royalty-free-stock-photography-word-copyright-image16575807
Future US, I. (2012, 01 01). MaximumPC. Retrieved 01 29, 2012, from http://www.maximumpc.com/article/features/byte_rights_we_cant_afford_no_education
Photos, R. F. (2006, 01 01). 123RF. Retrieved 01 29, 2012, from http://www.123rf.com/photo_9467256_3d-small-thinking-person-leant-against-a-red-question-3d-image-isolated-white-background.html
Salon. (1999, 06 14). The Web's Plagiarism Police. Retrieved 01 29, 2012, from http://www.salon.com/1999/06/14/plagiarism/