Dealing with copyright and fair use

November 15th, 2008  Tagged , ,

“Ever find yourself asking questions like these:

    Recently, the National Council of Teachers of English participated in  a report of how copyright and fair use should play out in education.  (”Fair use” refers to using copyrighted materials without cost for eductional purposes.)  While originally developed for media educators, the report applies to all teachers.  This is so important to all of us, I’m including the complete blog entry here:

 

http://ncteinbox.blogspot.com/2008/11/fair-use-and-copyright-for-educators.html

with a link to the complete report: http://www.mediaeducationlab.com/pdf/CodeofBestPracticesinFairUse.pdf 

 

One surprising finding:  teachers self-censor more than necessary.  We really can use copyrighted materials more than we thought we could, and often are being overly cautious. 

 

Some key considerations:  are we using copyrighted materials for teaching and learning, are we causing the original copyright owner significant financial harm, are we providing credit where credit is due (citing our sources), are we (or our students) transforming original work in the creation of new work? 

 

The entire report is well worth the read.