The World Digital Library (WDL) makes available on the Internet, free of charge and in multilingual format, significant primary materials from countries and cultures around the world. These cultural treasures include manuscripts, maps, rare books, musical scores, recordings, films, prints, photographs, and architectural drawings.
The Center for Social Media has created a set of teaching tools for professors who are interested in teaching their students about fair use. The tools include powerpoints with lecture notes, guidelines for in-class discussions and exercises, assignments and grading rubrics. We hope you'll find them useful!
These powerpoints with lecture notes were designed to help professors teach students the basic information they need to understand how to use fair use when making documentary fllms and online videos
Fair Use Scenarios: (To be used with the Documentary Filmmakers' Statement of Best Practices in Fair Use) Here are 4 filmmaking scenarios where students are called upon to determine whether they have a fair use right to use certain copyrighted footage, and if there are limits to that right.
Here are two sets of fair use clips for professors to use for in-class discussio
Here are guidelines for a short video production assignment that requires students to incorporate copyrighted material into a video and defend the decisions they make using the Code of Best Practices in Online Video.
Additionally, here is an assignment, similar to the discussion prompts above, that requires students to articulate why a video clip is fair use.
Here is a collection of videos that do a good job of explaining the Codes of Best Practices and the idea of Fair Use:
Anderson and Krathwohl's taxonomy – Remembering
1. Remembering: Retrieving, recalling or recognising knowledge from memory. Remembering is when memory is used to produce definitions, facts or lists, or recite or retrieve material.
Learning to know Learning to do Learning to live together Learning to be
The digital additions and their justifications are as follows:
Advanced and Boolean Searching
Bullet pointing
Highlightin
Bookmarking or favouriting
Social networkin
Social bookmarking
Searching or “googling
Understanding: Constructing meaning from different types of function be they written or graphic.
The digital additions and their justifications are as follows
“... team players. Virtually every project at Google is run by a small team. People need to work well together and perform up to the team's expectations. ”
Blog Journallin
Categorising & Taggin
ommenting and annotating
Subscribin
Applying: Carrying out or using a procedure through executing or implementing. Applying related and refers to situations where learned material is used through products like models, presentation, interviews and simulations.
The digital additions and their justifications are as follows:
Running and operating
Playin
Uploading and Sharin
Hacking
Editing
Analysing: Breaking material or concepts into parts, determining how the parts relate or interrelate to one another or to an overall structure or purpose. Mental actions include differentiating, organizing and attributing as well as being able to distinguish between components.
The digital additions and their justifications are as follows:
Mashing
Linking
Reverse-engineering
Cracking
.Evaluating: Making judgements based on criteria and standards through checking and critiquing..
The digital additions and their justifications are as follows:
Blog/vlog commenting and reflecting
Posting
Moderating
Collaborating and networking
Validating
Testing (Alpha and Beta)
Creating: Putting the elements together to form a coherent or functional whole; reorganising elements into a new pattern or structure through generating, planning or producing.
The digital additions and their justifications are as follows:
Programming
Filming, animating, videocasting, podcasting, mixing and remixing