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Jenny Darrow

Free Technology for Teachers: Illustrated and Narrated Explanation of Creative Commons - 0 views

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    The nuances of Copyright and Creative Commons and the differences between them can be confusing. I recently came across this neat little video that does a good job of explaining Creative Commons and what Creative Commons licenses allow or do not allow people to do with your works. A PDF of the images in the video can be found here.
Jenny Darrow

ccMixter - Yea, But Is It Legal? - 0 views

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    his is a community music remixing site featuring remixes and samples licensed under Creative Commons licenses. Music on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons license. You are free to download and sample from music on this site and share the results with anyone, anywhere, anytime. Some songs might have certain restrictions, depending on their specific licenses. Each submission is marked clearly with the license that applies to it. Sometimes, however, a contributor might accidentally upload copyrighted materials he or she doesn't have permission for. If you know of such a case or are the copyright holder of something posted here without your permission or a Creative Commons license, please let us know.
Jenny Darrow

Creative Commons: an Educational Primer | EdReach - 0 views

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    * This brief article provides an overview of Creative Commons relevant to educators. While copyright laws provide some provision for educational uses, materials (e.g., texts, videos, audio, images, etc.) released under one of the Creative Commons licenses are actually much easier to incorporate into course content. Rather than just linking to a source, you may have the licensed right to incorporate and edit the material directly
Jenny Darrow

Explaining Creative Commons Licensing | edte.ch - 0 views

  • It is often difficult to explain what Creative Commons licensing is to students and teachers – this short film does a pretty good job of presenting the facts. I do think there is a need for more high quality resources to help teach licensing of digital content and especially resources to communicate what it all means to young student. What do you think?
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    It is often difficult to explain what Creative Commons licensing is to students and teachers - this short film does a pretty good job of presenting the facts. I do think there is a need for more high quality resources to help teach licensing of digital content and especially resources to communicate what it all means to young student. What do you think?
Jenny Darrow

Downloads - Creative Commons - Creative Commons - 0 views

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    Creative Commons licenses provide a flexible range of protections and freedoms for authors, artists, and educators.
Jenny Darrow

Wylio.com - free pictures - 0 views

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    When you use Wylio, you're searching through the millions upon millions of Flickr photos that have been designated as Creative Commons works by their owners/uploaders. We don't guarantee the validity of the licenses since we can't control what people decide to upload to Flickr. So, be pragmatic when you decide what photo to use. If it's painfully obvious that "flickr_user_1234" isn't the copyright owner for that Coca-Cola logo they uploaded... don't use it. That said, it is our opinion that people generally upload their own work to Flickr (like they're suppose to). This means when a Flickr user decides to release one of their Flickr photos under a Creative Commons license, they are legally allowing certain uses of that photo.
Jenny Darrow

Jamendo - 0 views

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    Jamendo is a community of free, legal and unlimited music published under Creative Commons licenses. Share your music, download your favorite artists!
Judy Brophy

Licenses - Creative Commons - 0 views

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    The following describes each of the six main licenses offered when you choose to publish your work with a Creative Commons license. We have listed them starting with the most accommodating license type you can choose and ending with the most restrictive license type you can choose.
Judy Brophy

FFAQ - CC Wiki - 0 views

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    How do I properly attribute a Creative Commons licensed work? no specific examples
Jenny Darrow

untitled - 0 views

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    Creative commons from Pitt
Jenny Darrow

Connexions - Philosophy - 0 views

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    The Connexions approach Connexions is an environment for collaboratively developing, freely sharing, and rapidly publishing scholarly content on the Web. Our Content Commons contains educational materials for everyone - from children to college students to professionals - organized in small modules that are easily connected into larger collections or courses. All content is free to use and reuse under the Creative Commons "attribution" license.
Judy Brophy

Learning and Teaching at BCIT: Virtual Patient Cases - The Pine Project - 0 views

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    Here's a valuable set of resources for Health Sciences education: "60 public access virtual patient cases released under a Creative Commons licence for open use and reuse. Cases were created working with subject experts in workshops across the province. Using the open-source OpenLabyrinth platform the PINE project has a research and development theme investigating common simulation, gaming and narrative patterns in educational case design. This is facilitated by the use of the Vue topic mapping toolset that allows authors to create visual representations of activities and decision making processes."
Judy Brophy

Sharing Creative Works - CC Wiki - 0 views

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    Sharing Creative Works. Good slide show about whether to share and how much to share with different CC options 
Judy Brophy

TinEye Labs - Multicolr Search Lab - 0 views

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    We extracted the colors from 10 million Creative Commons images on Flickr. Search this collection by color. Addictive and very likely the best color search engine in the world*!
Judy Brophy

A Beginner's Guide to Canvas - 1 views

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    canvas course on how to use canvas. Creative commons
Jenny Darrow

Best practices for attribution - Creative Commons - 0 views

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    "You can use CC-licensed materials as long as you follow the license conditions. One condition of all CC licenses is attribution. Here are some good (and not so good) examples of attribution. Note: If you want to learn how to mark your own material with a CC license go here."
Jenny Darrow

Creative Commons: What Every Educator Needs to Know | dotSUB - 0 views

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    DotSub is mostly for collaboratively translating excellent videos into multiple languages, but the end result is that you get subtitled videos!  Here's an example - a collection of the "in plain English" videos embedded into this wiki page: https://confluence.delhi.edu/x/IwBiB Each one has a dropdown where you can select the subtitling language to display:Note that not all languages for each video are complete. It shows the percentage that is complete next to each language in the dropdown. Then, if you know a certain language, you can contribute by adding subtitles to a portion of the video... Very cool site!
Matthew Ragan

CC Search - 0 views

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    Creative Commons Search tool
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