Fair Use and Copyright for Educators


 Educator Use of Copyright Material!

 

How can we use music and video clip to teach?

 

 

Educators have a great deal of flexibility on using copyrighted material. Here is a brief summary:

 

Fair use explicitly allows use of copyrighted materials for educational purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Rather than listing exact limits of fair use, copyright law provides four standards for determination of the fair use exemption:

 

1 - Purpose of use: Copying and using selected parts of copyrighted works for specific educational purposes qualifies as fair use, especially if the copies are made spontaneously, are used temporarily, and are not part of an anthology.

2 - Nature of the work: For copying paragraphs from a copyrighted source, fair use easily applies. For copying a chapter, fair use may be questionable.

3 - Proportion/extent of the material used: Duplicating excerpts that are short in relation to the entire copyrighted work or segments that do not reflect the "essence" of the work is usually considered fair use.

4 -The effect on marketability: If there will be no reduction in sales because of copying or distribution, the fair use exemption is likely to apply.

 

 online_best_practices_in_fair_use[1].pdf

 

A visit to copyright Bay www.stfrancis.edu/cid/copyrightbay/

 

The Fair Use Guidelines for Educational Multimedia

provide for specific limits

on the amount of

copyrighted works

that may be used.

 

 

Link to Copyright explanation and resources  http://www.halldavidson.net/downloads.html#anchor923173