Copyright
Copyright Defined |
Copyright is the legal protection provided to a creator for his or her work - books, videos, magazine articles, paintings, illustrations and cartoons, even e-mail messages. |
Rights of the Owner |
The copyright holder has the right to reproduce the work in copies, make derivative or modifications of the work, distribute the work to the public, as well as publicly perform or display the work. |
Fair Use |
Fair Use provides certain rights to educators. Each of the following four factors must be considered in determining Fair Use: purpose and character of the use, nature of the copyrighted work, amount and substantiality of the material used, and the effect of the use on the potential market. |
Fair Use Test |
Brevity - the relative amount copied, should be brief. Spontaneity - the inspiration and decision did not allow time to write for copyright permission. Cumulative effect - the combination of small uses that amount collectively to such a proportion that economic is done. |
Guidelines for Classroom Copy |
Poetry - a complete poem, if less than 250 words or an excerpt of not more than 250 words. Article, story, essay - less than 2,500 words, if complete: 1,000 words or 10%, if an excerpt. Chart, graph, diagram, drawing, cartoon, or picture - 1 per book or periodical. Picture books - 2 published pages or less than 10 of a work. |
Rights of the Educator - Audiovisual Materials |
Educators can display a perform audiovisual materials if all these conditions are met:
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Multimedia Guidelines |
The guidelines specify limits on the use of the copyrighted materials for multimedia productions. Typical portion limits are as follow:
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Video |
Off-air recordings - may be freely taped from regular broadcast channels (but not from those which charge a fee), following these guidelines:
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