| Copyright and Fair Use Guidelines for Teachers | |||
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On November 2, 2002, President Bush signed into law Senate Bill 487, also known as the Technology, Education, and Copyright Harmonization Act of 2001, or TEACH Act. The following chart is an HTML version of a chart created by Hall Davidson to inform teachers of fair use of copyrighted materials, as provided in Chapter 1 of Title 17 of the United States Code. Davidson is the executive director of educational services and telecommunications at KOCE-TV in California. You may download the original PDF version suitable for printing on two pages from halldavidson.net. |
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| Medium | Specifics | What You Can Do | The Fine Print |
| Printed Material (Short) |
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| Printed Material (archives) |
An entire work
Portions of a work
A work in which the existing format has become obsolete, e.g., a document stored on a Wang computer
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Copies must contain copyright information.
Archiving rights are designed to allow libraries to share with other libraries one-of-a-kind and out-of-print books
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| Illustrations and Photographs | Photograph
Illustration
Collections of photographs
Collections of illustrations
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Single works may be used in their entirety, but no more than five images by a single artist or photographer may be used.
From a collection, not more than 15 images or 10 percent (whichever is less) may be used.
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Although older illustrations may be in the public domain and don't need permission to be used, sometimes they're part of a copyright collection. Copyright ownership information is available at www.loc.gov or www.mpa.org.
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| Video (for viewing) |
Videotapes (purchased)
Videotape (rented)
DVD
Laser Discs
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Teachers may use these materials in the classroom without restrictions of length, percentage, or multiple use
Copies may be copied for archival purposes or to replace lost, damaged, or stolen copies.
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The material must legitimately acquired (a legal copy).
Material must be used in a classroom or nonprofit environment "dedicated to face-to-face instruction".
The use should be instructional, not for entertainment or reward.
Copying OK only if replacements are unavailable at a fair price or in a viable format.
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| Video (for integration into multimedia or video projects) |
Videotapes
DVD
LaserdDiscs
QuickTime Movies
Encyclopedias (CD ROM)
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Students "may use portions of lawfully acquired copyrighted works in their academic multimedia", defined as 10% or three minutes (whichever is less) of "motion media"
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The material must be legitimately acquired (a legal copy, not bootleg or home recording).
Copyright works included in multimedia projects must give proper attribution to copyright holder.
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| Music (for integration into multimedia or video projects |
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Up to 10% of a copyrighted musical composition may be reproduced, performed and displayed as part of a multimedia program produced by an educator or student for educational purposes. |
A maximum of 30 seconds per musical composition may be used.
Multimedia program must have an educational purpose.
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| Computer Software |
Software (purchased)
Software (licensed)
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Library may lend software to patrons.
Software may be installed on multiple machines, and distributed to users via a network.
Software may be installed at home and at school.
Libraries may make copies for archival use or to replace lost, damaged, or stolen copies if software is unavailable at a fair price or in a viable format.
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Only one machine at a time may use the program.
The number of simultaneous users must not exceed the number of licenses; and the number of machines being used must never exceed the number licensed. A network license may be required for multiple users.
Take aggressive action to monitor that copying is not taking place (unless for archival purposes).
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| Internet |
Internet connections
World Wide Web
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Resources from the Web may not be reposted onto the Internet without permission. However, links to legitimate resources can be posted.
Any resources you download must have been legitimately acquired by the Web site.
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| Television |
Broadcast (e.g.,ABC,NBC, CBS, UPN, PBS, local television stations)
Cable (e.g., CNN,MTV, HBO)
Videotapes made of broadcast and cable TV programs
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Broadcasts or tapes made from broadcast may be used for instruction.
Cable channel programs may be used with permission. Many programs may be retained by teachers for years— see Cable in the Classroom for details.
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Schools are allowed to retain broadcast tapes for a minimum of 10 school days. (Enlightened rights holders,such as PBS's ReadingRainbow, allow for much more.)
Cable programs are technically not covered by the same guidelines as broadcast television.
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TEACH Act Resources |
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| NCCC Association of Distance Learning Educators | |||
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