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K-12 COPYRIGHT LAWS: PRIMER FOR TEACHERS Copyright Laws Do’s and Don’ts What is Legal in the School Classroom.

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Presentation on theme: "K-12 COPYRIGHT LAWS: PRIMER FOR TEACHERS Copyright Laws Do’s and Don’ts What is Legal in the School Classroom."— Presentation transcript:

1 K-12 COPYRIGHT LAWS: PRIMER FOR TEACHERS Copyright Laws Do’s and Don’ts What is Legal in the School Classroom

2 Using Music Without Permission or License CLASSROOM – Original composition / have the composer’s permission – Have permission of the publishers – Music is used in distance education, comply the TEACH Act

3 PUBLIC DOMAIN - works published before January 1, 1923 - works published between 1923-1978 without copyright notice - works published between 1923-1978 no renewed copyright - works authored by employees of the federal government - works that the copyright owner granted use - no works published after January 1, 1978, will pass into the public domain until 2048. Anonymous work are protected for 95 years after publication.

4 FAIR USE US Copyright Law Title 17 – Section 107 What are your Fair Use Rights? Four Criteria: – Purpose and character of the use (commercial or nonprofit – Nature of the copyrighted work – Amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted whole – Effect of the use upon potential market or value of the copyrighted work

5 TYPES OF MEDIA AND PERMISSIBLE AMOUNTS Motion Media - Up to 10 percent of the total or 3 minutes Text Material - Up to 10 percent of the total or 1,000 words - An Entire poem or less that 250 words may be used; for poems over 250 words only three excepts may be used Music, Lyrics, and Music Video - Up to 10 percent of the work but no more than 30 seconds from an individual work

6 Illustrations and Photographs - no more than five images from ne artist or photographer - no more that 10% or 15 images from a collection Numerical Data Sets - up to 10% or 2,500 fields or cell entries Copying of a Multimedia Project - no more than two copies may be made of a project

7 Guidelines for Multiple Copies No more than…. - one work is copied from a single author - three authors are copied from a single collective work - nine instances of multiple copying occur during a single term or semester Consumable works shall not be copied, such as - workbooks that are made to consume and are copy protected - workbooks that you can copy and what are referred to as “black line masters” – only copy enough for your class - standardized tests - the same item will not be reproduced from term to term

8 Copyright Quiz (5 Questions) Answer the questions True or False. Click on the triangle next to your answer. Using music in a public domain one does not need to get permission if the works was published prior to January 1, 1923. True False

9 Answer the questions True or False. Click on the triangle next to your answer. You can make two copies of a multimedia project. True False

10 Answer the questions True or False. Click on the triangle next to your answer. Copying illustrations and photographs from a single artist, you are allowed fifteen images. True False

11 Answer the questions True or False. Click on the triangle next to your answer. You may copy any and all workbooks. True False

12 Answer the questions True or False. Click on the triangle next to your answer.. The same item will not be reproduced from term to term. True False

13 You are correct! (Click on the arrow to return to the quiz)

14 Try again! (Click on the arrow to return to the quiz)


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