Copyright (NETS-T: 4a, 4b, 4c)
As the digital landscape continues to expand, we must remind ourselves of the purpose of copyright and impress that purpose into the minds of young people. Following copyright rules and applying fair use in education is the law. For any questions, please see the following links, the media specialist or your ITS:
Stanford Copyright and Fair Use
Technology & Learning Copyright and Fair Use Guidelines for Teachers
Copyright Office-Library of Congress
Copyright Website--This site, previewed first by the teacher, illustrates cases of where even famous stars have been questioned about copyright infringement in songs, movies,etc.
Stanford Copyright and Fair Use
Technology & Learning Copyright and Fair Use Guidelines for Teachers
Copyright Office-Library of Congress
Copyright Website--This site, previewed first by the teacher, illustrates cases of where even famous stars have been questioned about copyright infringement in songs, movies,etc.
Creative Commons (NETS-T: 4a, 4b, 4c)
Creative Commons
Creative Commons is "a licensing concept created by Creative Commons that builds upon traditional copyright practices to define possibilities that exist between the standard "all rights reserved" full copyright and public domain "no rights reserved". A Creative Commons license lets you dictate how others may use your work. The Creative Commons license allows you to keep your copyright but allows others to copy and distribute your work provided they give you credit and only on the conditions you specify. For online work you can select a license that generates "Some Rights Reserved" or a "No Rights Reserved" button and statement for your published work."
---Definition from Webopedia
Creative Commons is "a licensing concept created by Creative Commons that builds upon traditional copyright practices to define possibilities that exist between the standard "all rights reserved" full copyright and public domain "no rights reserved". A Creative Commons license lets you dictate how others may use your work. The Creative Commons license allows you to keep your copyright but allows others to copy and distribute your work provided they give you credit and only on the conditions you specify. For online work you can select a license that generates "Some Rights Reserved" or a "No Rights Reserved" button and statement for your published work."
---Definition from Webopedia