Fair Dealing for Elementary Teachers
- Fair dealing is a provision to the copyright act that permits non-profit K-12 schools permission to use copyright-protected work for educational purposes without permission from the copyright owner and without paying copyright royalties.
- The attached Fair Dealing Guidelines must be followed
- For example sharing is limited to…
- 10% of a copyright protected work
- one chapter from a book
- a single article from a periodical (magazine or newspaper)
- an entire artistic work from a copyright protected work containing other artistic works
- see fair dealing guidelines above for more
Here are some Key Copyright Questions & Answers for Teachers
The Public Domain
- Any work that is not protected by copyright is in the public domain
- Seventy five years after a copyright-protected work is created it moves to the public domain
- Once a piece is in the public domain it is free to use without permission (Stanford University Libraries)
- For example, Romeo and Juliet by Bill Shakespeare is in the public domain. So a teacher could print out copies of the entire play for the whole class.
Here are some links to find work in the public domain:
https://archive.org/
https://web.law.duke.edu/cspd/publicdomainday/2021/
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Main_Page
http://www.gutenberg.org/
Creative Commons
- Creative Commons copyright licenses are a way of having a middle option for creators to be between having full copy-right or being in the public domain
- Creative Commons makes it possible for creators to decide how they want their work to be used. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/)
Some Open Educational Resources
https://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulations/filter?type=html&sort=alpha&view=grid
Reusable Multimedia Groups
- A place to find media that does not require attribution. Ex. A student can use a picture from this group without addressing copyright
https://www.google.ca/advanced_search
https://www.pexels.com/videos/
https://freemusicarchive.org/search
Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA)
- No photos of students should be made public or shared within the class without permission
- Educators should not collect or dispose personal information without informed consent of collection
- If students are using social media for a project, educators should provide students/parents..
- the educational purpose of the project
- the technology used
- the personal information that may be required
- why the authority is requiring it
- potential uses of the information
References