Carrye Campbell

SLM 521

Spring 2005

Copyright

 

 

Scenario 1

A teacher in your school (who has a really rowdy bunch of monsters) makes an agreement with them that they learn how to make Power Point presentations on sports, war, hunting, rock music, and such.  She lets them get graphics from anywhere on the Internet.  She recommends sites such as Sports Illustrated, ESPN, DOD, and the Rock and Roll Music Hall of Fame.  They make great presentations and become great kids.  What are the copyright implications?

 

To avoid infringement on copyright law, the teacher should be aware of the Fair Use limitations to the amount of copyrighted graphics the students are allowed to copy.

 

According to the Fair Use Guidelines for Multimedia Projects, the copyright implications relating to this activity are:

 

 

As long as students follow the Fair Use guidelines, the presentations should be fine. The teacher should check with the school though to make sure that the web sites are acceptable for student use.

 

 

Scenario 3

Mr. Hamer is tutoring for the functional writing test out of a copyrighted series of workbooks from Houghton Mifflin. He has 27 students but only 20 books were purchased for his class. The same material is available at the HM web page. He prints enough pages for his kids each morning for the day's class.

 

To avoid infringement on copyright law, the teacher should be aware of the Fair Use limitations for making multiple copies for classroom use.

 

According to the Fair Use Guidelines for Multimedia Projects, the copyright implications relating to this activity are: