Wow! There is so much to know to make sure copyrights are protected and not infringed upon! I am feeling a bit overwhelmed! However, I am thankful I am learning about Creative Commons, so I can help educate my students on how to be a responsible digital citizen. Without this class, I would be infringing on copyrights and opening myself to possible consequences. I think I will follow Camille's example and keep the Fair Use guidelines handy to help ensure I don't stray from what is allowable. So I was wondering if I make a test and/or worksheet and share it, should I put the CC information at the bottom to help other teachers know how I want my work to be used? I am glad we did the spreadsheet in Google Docs tonight, so I can quickly look over the pros and cons of sites where students might be able to use photos, etc. This will really help with time being so limited! Well that's about it for tonight!
For the rest of this course, we are going to work on using tools with students.
Creative commons--kid-friendly & copyright friendly sites for kids
www.copyrightkids.org
How can we license things using creative commons so things are being used the way we want them to be used?
Places to find elements to use--may not be a free for all--may have creative commons restrictions.
Make sure you the rights
Make sure you understand how Creative Commons licenses operate
How does a Creative Commons license operate?
Do the ported licenses contain special terms depending on which you choose?
Can put a blanket CC on your blog? You can put specific CC on certain photos? No rights given for family, other photos are licensed in a different way.
CC Licenses--Attribution CCBY
This license lets otherss distribute, remix, tweak, and build upon your work, even commercially, as long as they credit you for the original creation. This is the most accomodating license. CAN do anything you want with this.
Next up--CC Licenses--Attribution--No Derivs CC BY--ND
Can use it, but cannot change it--must give credit.
CC Licenses--Attribution--NonCommercial-ShareAlike CC BY--NC-SA
Noncommercial, Share Alike-
Can remix, tweak, and build upon your work non-commercially, as long as they credit you and license their new creations under the identical terms
CC Licenses--attribution--share alike CC BY SA
This allows commercial use. "copyleft"
CC Licenses--Attribution--Noncommerical
CC BY-NC
DON'T have to license their derivative works on the same terms. Must acknowledge you and not be commercial
CC Licenses--Attribution--NonCommercial-NoDerivs CC BY-NC-ND
Can't change them in any way or use them commercially. Must give credit--can't use commercially--MOST restrictive of all 6 licenses.
Creativecommons.org Walks you through how you want to license your work.
Flubaroo--grading made easy--able to email students their grades.
FAIR USE Policy
What is fair use? a fair use is any copying of copyrighted material done for a limited "transformative"
Public Domain--not protected by intellectual property such as copyright, trademark, or patent laws.
* copyright has expired--person dead plus 70 years
* the copyright owner failed to follow copyright renewal rules
* the copyright owner deliberately places it in the public domain, known as dedication
* copyright law does not protect this type of work
A Fair(y) Use Tale--never use Disney--this video falls into Fair Use category
Fair Use--you can can parody, critical comments, teach, news reporting
Rules:
1. Nature of the work borrowed--how using the work
2. The amount of work borrowed--music/audio 10% or 30 seconds which ever is shorter.; 10% or 3 minutes of a movie or which ever is shorter
3. Doesn't change commercial impact
4. Legal defense to copyright
Kid Blogging
For the rest of this course, we are going to work on using tools with students.
Creative commons--kid-friendly & copyright friendly sites for kids
www.copyrightkids.org
How can we license things using creative commons so things are being used the way we want them to be used?
Places to find elements to use--may not be a free for all--may have creative commons restrictions.
- Sites that are kid-safe and copyright friendly for student projects:
- Soundzabound
- Pics4Learning
- New York Public Library
- Library of Congress
- Pioneer Library
- SIRS, SIRS Discover
- CultureGrams
- World Book Online
- EBSCO
- Mountain West Digital Library
- Civil War
- Depression Era
- EduPic
- Geo-Images Project
- Maps
- NASA Image eXchange
- Roosevelt Presidential Library
- US Air Force
- US Fish and Wildlife Service
- US Navy Images
- Virtual Picture Album
- Copyright works--create any tangible thing--automatically own the copyright to it.
- Want someone to use your work and don't want people to come ask you--Creative Commons allows you a way to share your work. Don't give up your copyright--allow it to be refined.
- The infrastructure provided consists of a set of copyright licenses and tools that create a balance inside the traditional "all rights reserved" setting that copyright law creates.
Make sure you the rights
Make sure you understand how Creative Commons licenses operate
How does a Creative Commons license operate?
Do the ported licenses contain special terms depending on which you choose?
Can put a blanket CC on your blog? You can put specific CC on certain photos? No rights given for family, other photos are licensed in a different way.
CC Licenses--Attribution CCBY
This license lets otherss distribute, remix, tweak, and build upon your work, even commercially, as long as they credit you for the original creation. This is the most accomodating license. CAN do anything you want with this.
Next up--CC Licenses--Attribution--No Derivs CC BY--ND
Can use it, but cannot change it--must give credit.
CC Licenses--Attribution--NonCommercial-ShareAlike CC BY--NC-SA
Noncommercial, Share Alike-
Can remix, tweak, and build upon your work non-commercially, as long as they credit you and license their new creations under the identical terms
CC Licenses--attribution--share alike CC BY SA
This allows commercial use. "copyleft"
CC Licenses--Attribution--Noncommerical
CC BY-NC
DON'T have to license their derivative works on the same terms. Must acknowledge you and not be commercial
CC Licenses--Attribution--NonCommercial-NoDerivs CC BY-NC-ND
Can't change them in any way or use them commercially. Must give credit--can't use commercially--MOST restrictive of all 6 licenses.
Creativecommons.org Walks you through how you want to license your work.
Flubaroo--grading made easy--able to email students their grades.
FAIR USE Policy
What is fair use? a fair use is any copying of copyrighted material done for a limited "transformative"
Public Domain--not protected by intellectual property such as copyright, trademark, or patent laws.
* copyright has expired--person dead plus 70 years
* the copyright owner failed to follow copyright renewal rules
* the copyright owner deliberately places it in the public domain, known as dedication
* copyright law does not protect this type of work
A Fair(y) Use Tale--never use Disney--this video falls into Fair Use category
Fair Use--you can can parody, critical comments, teach, news reporting
Rules:
1. Nature of the work borrowed--how using the work
2. The amount of work borrowed--music/audio 10% or 30 seconds which ever is shorter.; 10% or 3 minutes of a movie or which ever is shorter
3. Doesn't change commercial impact
4. Legal defense to copyright
Kid Blogging
- Demonstrate teacher account in Kidblog.org and management of account.
- Login as students (go to Bliss Blog, Username: firstnamelastinitial Password: kidblog)
- Comment on a post, comment on each other's entrie
- What uses would you suggest for a student blog? Instructional value? Social value? Brainstorm with small groups - Share Resources: Edublogs Resources and Curriculum Corner
- Create own teacher accounts and enter some students in either Kidblog or Edublogs
- Value of student blogging?
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