Showing posts with label copyright for educators. Show all posts
Showing posts with label copyright for educators. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 21, 2020

Copyright and Creativity for Ethical Digital Citizens - free K-12 resources for teaching students about copyright and fair use



Copyright and Creativity for Ethical Digital Citizens, is a nonprofit project that has developed a suite of free K-12 resources for teaching students about copyright and fair use. 

The premise is that students today need to learn the basics of copyright as an element of digital citizenship. That's especially true in the current crisis, as teachers and students shift virtually all of their educational and social activity online. Whether they know it or not, they are doing things that raise copyright questions. For example, when is it OK to use some of someone else’s work in a project or presentation? How should they expect others to treat their own work online? This is an area of modern digital literacy in which both teachers and students often have significant gaps.



C&C offers a full suite of lesson plans, slides, and learning videos for teachers to use with students of all ages -- elementary, middle, and high school. They have an online professional development course for teachers to bolster their own knowledge. And recently posted a resource sheet on copyright issues that arise in distance learning. The aim is to provide positive, practical information about how to navigate copyright successfully, rather than a scolding message focused on anti-piracy.

-- These resources are all free. C&C is a nonprofit project under the Internet Education Foundation, so its goal is simply to promote education in this area by disseminating its materials widely.

-- The materials are intended to be easy for teachers to use on a plug-and-play basis. But they are licensed through Creative Commons so teachers are welcome to build them into their own lessons however they see fit.

-- C&C's materials take a positive approach, focusing on what copyright empowers and enables rather than just what it prohibits. That's important, because students won't be engaged with lessons that focus only on "thou shalt nots." What they need is guidance on how they can do the things they want to do -- access media, share their enthusiasm for media they love, and make their own creative work while sometimes incorporating the work of others. So C&C aims to provide positive and practical advice, focusing especially on kids' own roles as creators.



-- Of particular interest during this pandemic, C&C's resources are all readily usable for distance learning. We have also posted some tips and resources on copyright and distance learning.




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Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Taking the Mystery out of Copyright - from Library of Congress



Taking the Mystery out of Copyright is a site from the US Library of Congress that uses animations to teach about copyrights and copyright laws. It's fun and educational and easy to understand.

The Library of Congress also has a lot of other great resources for educators.





Thursday, November 19, 2009

Copyright Advisory Network



The Copyright Advisory Network is a great resource when you need help with copyright issues.
The site has articles, copyright tools, advice, and more to help you deal with copyright issues and sort through how to deal with different items in a scholarly setting.

Copyright issues and Fair use are often misunderstood by teachers and students and this site can help explain things in an easy to understand way.

For more copyright resources:







Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Copyright Friendly Resource



Copyright Friendly is a great wiki site that has links to tons of copyright friendly images and sound for use in projects, web pages, and blogs.

The site is easy to navigate and the listings tell you what each site contains. For most of them, you do not have to cite them for educational purposes, but you should at least give credit to them. Many sites have copyright notices on them, so you should read the terms of use of the images.

For more information on the Creative Commons Licenses that most sites use these days, visit there SITE.

Here are some more posts on copyrights for teachers:




Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Copyright Issues


Copyright issues in education are very confusing. Copyright laws are almost impossible to understand and education has different rules for many things.

Teaching Copyright is a great resource for teachers to use in their classroom. The site has information for teachers to understand educational copyright laws and rules, as well as lesson plans to use with your students.

Students need to understand that there are copyright rules and laws and that they need to abide by them. Many students think that if it is on the internet, they can use it. They can get away with alot of this in K-12 because teachers don't have the time or resources to check everything the students use, but many colleges have these resources and students can get in big trouble if they have a copyright violation in their work.

I found Teaching Copyright to be a great resource and very easy to use. It has lesson plans, handouts, resources, and links for teachers. Every teacher should work with their students and help them understand copyright rules.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Copyright for Educators



Free technology for Teachers has a great post on Copyright for Educators with a video that explains it really well.

This is something all teachers should watch and then share some of it with their students. Too many students, and teachers, don't understand copyright issues and are violating copyright laws.

Intel also has a great resource. You can find a copy of the presentation here on my site

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