Skip to main content

Home/ carlatech/ Group items tagged Creative Commons

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Alyssa Rutherford

‪Creative Commons Kiwi‬‏ - YouTube - 0 views

  •  
    short video explaining the symbols that reflect creative commons rules
Alyssa Rutherford

K12 Online Conference 2010 | Creative Commons: What Every Educator Needs to Know - 0 views

  •  
    A video about how copyright and creative commons come into play in our world of "sharing"
Marlene Johnshoy

7 Places & Ways to Find Copyright-friendly Images - 2 views

  •  
    I'm always frustrated with sites that say they have free images and then link to a bunch more sites that say and do the same thing. Here are 7 sites to find photos and images that are copyright-free or friendly, in addition to Flickr. Do you remember how to search using Creative Commons??
Marlene Johnshoy

Creative Commons Licensing Comes to YouTube - 0 views

  •  
    It's about time!  Now you can search for videos on YouTube that permit you to use them up front.  Have you ever used the YouTube Video Editor - something else to check out!
klmcguinness

The Educator's Guide to Copyright, Fair Use, and Creative Commons - The Edublogger - 3 views

  • This may seem obvious, but judging by the notices we have received, many teachers (and especially students) are under the impression that if it is on the web, then it is up for grabs.
    • klmcguinness
       
      This is protocol in my classroom-they may as well learn it right the first time rather than the hard way later. When using Google images: go all the way to the cog wheel pull down on the right side of the toolbar; 2) go down to Advance Search; 3) inside Advanced Image Search, all the way at the bottom is a pulldown for usage rights, select "free to use or share" or, if you need to alter the image in anyway "fee to use share or modify." 
  • That is, in some cases, if an image, text, video, etc. is being used for educational purposes, there might be more flexible copyright rules.
    • klmcguinness
       
      Well, that's a relief, huh?!
    • brittasparksbr
       
      Just yesterday I was watching a webinar from a national organization, and on one of the PowerPoint pages I saw a picture of one of my district's students with his PE teacher. I was shocked and wondered how it came to be in this webinar. I can only guess that there was a newpaper article with this picture in the local paper, and that put it out there on the web, and it was found and inserted into this PowerPoint. I also thought it was pretty cool - one of ours in something like that. It was crazy just happening upon it like I did though.
  • But make sure to check specific copyright restrictions before uploading anything you’ve scanned to the web!
    • klmcguinness
       
      This is a biggie! I know of some teachers who upload all their homework handouts in .pdf format. I can think of only one who might have asked permission to do so. But, why bother buying that textbook's workbook if I can download it from another district for free. I can certainly see publishers having issue with that.
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • TeachingCopyright.org.
    • klmcguinness
       
      Keeping this one bookmarked for future reference.
  • If only that were true.
  • copyright holders to give you (and the host of your site, such as Edublogs, WordPress, etc.) an official notification.
  • CreativeCommons.org website
    • klmcguinness
       
      Another important website to keep handy!
  • You are free to embed any video from YouTube, Vimeo, WatchKnowLearn, etc. on your blog or website as long as it gives you the embed option.
    • klmcguinness
       
      This answers my earlier question about using a video in eduCanon. Seemed really wrong to do that, but guess it is understood when you upload if you allow others to borrow, they will.
    • srafuller
       
      I guess that's why on some music videos, there is a statement that there is no ownership in the content? I don't know. I also bookmarked this article as I know I will need it as time goes on.
  •  
    This is a great explanation. Thank you for posting it. Any idea about the legality of editing YouTube videos with eduCanon?
Marlene Johnshoy

Faculty Self Assessment - Are you ready to teach online? - 5 views

  • This work by Penn State University is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License
  •  
    A quick assessment that will give you some ideas about what's needed to be an online teacher
Marlene Johnshoy

How to get and use free images the RIGHT way in class | Ditch That Textbook - 1 views

  •  
    "The digital age has opened classrooms up to a figurative stack of magazines that's virtually unlimited, searchable and easily usable. "
1 - 9 of 9
Showing 20 items per page