This document discusses copyright and fair use for classroom use. It provides an overview of copyright law under the US Constitution and exceptions for educational purposes, including face-to-face instruction, virtual instruction under the TEACH Act, and fair use. It analyzes two examples using the four fair use factors and determines that one situation would require permission while the other is fair use. Recent copyright decisions like the Georgia State University case are also summarized, which provide some guidelines for educational fair use but leave many questions still unknown.
3. Copyright -- U.S. Constitution
“Empowers the United States Congress to
promote the Progress of Science and useful
Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors
and Inventors the exclusive Right to their
respective Writings and Discoveries”
Copyright Clause of the U. S. Constitution
(Article I, Section 8, Clause 8)
4. Copyright -- Confusion
Copyright vs. Public Domain
– Usually by Date
– http://copyright.cornell.edu/resources/publicd
omain.cfm
Copyright vs. Open Access
Copyright and Creative Commons
Both Copyright – Permissions issue
5. Exceptions to Copyright Law
Numerous - depending on type of
material, users, and author/producers
3 Major for Educational Purposes
1. Face-to-face Instruction
2. Virtual Instruction
3. Fair Use
6. Face-to-face Instruction*
Traditional classroom -- In this setting all
performances and displays of a work
(Text, Music, Images, and Video) are allowed.
Requirements:
1. All materials must be legally acquired.
2. Teaching activities must take place in a classroom or a similar place
devoted to instruction.
(*Section 110 of the U.S. Copyright Code)
7. Virtual Instruction*
Online, Hybrid, or supplemental use of course
management systems. Virtual instruction
includes digitally transmitting class materials
to students. The basic premise is to allow
comparable instruction in the online
environment as to what takes place in a
traditional classroom.
(*Section 110(2) -- TEACH Act)
8. TEACH Act Requirements- 3 Types
Instructors
– Regular part of the curriculum, chosen by the
instructor, must be an integral part of the class
session, directly related to the teaching
content, and comparable to traditional class.
Technology
– Only enrolled students, only for the duration of
the class, and students can’t copy/share.
9. TEACH Act Requirements- 3 Types
Course Materials
– Listing of acceptable materials – most materials
– Non acceptable materials – textbooks, course
packs, illegal copies
– Must contain notice of copyright
– May convert analog version to digital (only
amount needed)
10. Fair Use
Fair use allows for exceptions to the copyright
law for use not specifically exempted as long
as that use can be considered fair.
A key consideration is the extent to which the
use is interpreted as transformative, as
opposed to merely derivative.
11. Fair Use
The copyright law also states the various
purposes for which the reproduction of a
particular work may be considered fair, some
of these include criticism, comment, news
reporting, teaching, scholarship, and
research.
12. Fair Use
The “fairness” is based on four factors each of
which is weighed equally.
1.
2.
3.
4.
Nature and Purpose of the Use
Nature of the Copyrighted Work
Amount or Substantiality of Portion Used
Effect on the Market Place
13. 2 Examples – Example 1
A professor whishes to place 3 chapters (an
introductory chapter and chapters 12 & 13 of
the 15 chapter work). The work is a non
fiction treaties on the housing crisis where
the work analyses several factors with
emphasis on the changing regulation in the
banking industry as the root cause.
14. 2 Examples – Example 2
To supplement information not discussed indepth in the course textbook. An
environmental science professor wants to
place one chapter of a 12 chapter book that
discusses the health, safety, and
environmental impact of a chemical used in
cleaning up oil spills from a organic chemistry
book focused on hydrocarbons.
15. 1st Factor
Purpose and Character of the Use
Purpose –
Nonprofit, Educational, Personal, Commercial,
For Profit
Character –
Teaching, Research, Scholarship, Criticism, Com
mentary, News Reporting, Entertainment
Fair Use – Educational Nonprofit using works
for teaching, research, and scholarship
16. 1st Factor - Purpose & Character
of the Use
Example 1 – Nonprofit Educational
Institution using the work for
Teaching/Scholarship
– Favors Fair Use
Example 2 -- Nonprofit Educational
Institution using the work for
Teaching/Scholarship
– Favors Fair Use
17. 2nd Factor
Nature of the Copyrighted Work
Factual vs. Creative
Scholarly, scientific, technical vs. artistic, fiction
Some items not covered, i.e. consumables –
workbooks, standardized tests, etc. also recipes
Fair Use -- favors use of factual works
18. 2nd Factor - Nature of the
Copyrighted Work
Example 1 – This is a nonfiction popular
work that tends towards creative/opinion
as marketplace is broader than academic
– Tossup
Example 2 – The work is a
factual, scientific/technical work
– Favors Fair Use
19. 3rd Factor
Amount or Substantiality of Portion Used
2 Criteria
How much is used?
Core or “Heart of the Work”?
Depends on type of material
No magic number or percentage*
20. 3rd Factor - Amount or
Substantiality of Portion Used
Example 1 – 3 chapters of 15 chapter work
is 20% and ending chapters with conclusion
could be considered “Heart of the work”
– Favors needing permission
Example 2 – 1 chapter of 12 chapter work
with chapter not core to the overall work.
– Favors Fair Use
21. 4th Factor
Impact on the Market Place
Effect of the use upon the potential market
for, or value of, the copyrighted work
Use vs. Purchase?
Criteria - Permissions readily available or
not, at reasonable cost, own a copy of the
work, access restrictions in place…
22. 4th Factor - Impact on the
Market Place
Example 1 – Library owns copy but e-book
available and permission can be obtained
from Copyright Clearance Center (CCC).
– Favors needing permission
Example 2 – Library owns copy of book,
e-book not available and not with CCC.
– Favors Fair Use
23. 4 Factors Analysis
Example 1
1. Fair Use
2. Tossup
3. Permission
4. Permission
Example 2
1. Fair Use
2. Fair Use
3. Fair Use
4. Fair Use
Need to obtain
permission!
Can use without
permission under Fair Use
24. Fair Use
Balance between Public and Copyright
holder
All factors should be weighted the same
Not dependent on technology or format
Fair use allows for use without permission
Not all educational use is Fair Use!
26. Georgia State Univ. Decision
In Brief –
Three scholarly publishers supported by the
Association of American Publishers and the
Copyright Clearance Center sued GSU in 2008
over electronic reserves policy/practices as
they felt they were in violation of Fair Use or
were infringing on their copyright.
27. GSU Decision
Case decided in 2012
5 Total Violations out of 99 or 75
– Started with 99 works but couldn’t prove they
held copyright for 24 of the works
– Analyzed 75 total works for the 4 factors
4 Violations – exceeded amount and
permissions were available and 1 “heart of
the work.”
28. GSU Implications
Really Unknown Still!
– Appeal
– Georgia only
– Reserves and Non-fiction works
Provided Guidelines* on amount – 10% of
works under 10 chapters or 1 chapter for
items with 10 or more chapters
29. GSU Implications
Eliminated old one semester rule!
Leaned heavily on availability of easily and
reasonably obtaining permission
Economic Good News
– “Prevailing Party” Ruling
– Monetary damages would have been negligible
or unavailable due to state sovereign immunity.
30. Takeaways
Library is here to help
– Both E-Reserves and Copyright Questions
Library can’t always perform miracles
– Permissions take time and/or cost money
– Permission costs passed back to Departments
Things are getting better
31. Overall Picture– Things are
Getting Better
More Guidelines
More Licensed Resources
Paid Permissions more streamlined
Greater Awareness of Copyright &Fair Use
Limited Liability
UIS Policies/Activities/Services
hsmVirtual instruction is when a course is taught either solely online or when components of face-to-face instruction are taught online such as with Blackboard and other course management systems. Virtual instruction includes digitally transmitting class materials to students. This transmission is authorized under the TEACH (Technology Education and Copyright Harmonization) Act which is a part of the copyright law. The basic premise behind TEACH is to allow comparable instruction in the online environment as to what takes place in a traditional classroom or face-to-face instruction. One of the major requirements of the law is that materials can only be digitally transmitted to students officially registered in the course. There are other requirements for teaching, technology, and course materials that instructors must meet as well before using the TEACH exception.