Skip to main content
Displaying 1 of 1
Copyright for teachers & librarians in the 21st century
2011
Availability
Large Cover Image
Trade Reviews
Booklist Review
An update of the 2004 edition, this newest version consists of 14 chapters divided into two parts; 82 flowcharts, of which 19 are new; appendixes (e.g., selected U.S. copyright laws); and references at the end of each chapter. Part 1 focuses on copyright basics, such as fair use and the guidelines, public domain, legally obtaining use of works, interlibrary loan, orphan works, infringements, and plagiarism. Part 2 addresses specific applications of copyright law, including the Internet/web; movie formats (e.g., DVD, video streaming, on-demand); TV; computer software; music/audio; and distance education. Chapter 14 explores the question: What does it all mean for K-12 teachers and librarians? The thoughtful layout, question-answer format, and clear flowcharts contribute to this title's readability and usefulness. Given how quickly technology changes, this title deserves a place on professional-reading shelves.--Sinofsky, Esther Copyright 2010 Booklist
Summary

Here is a practical copyright handbook designed to help librarians, media specialists, technology coordinators and specialists, and teachers stay within copyright law while making copyrighted print, non-print, and Web sources available to students and others. Library educator Rebecca Butler explains fair use, public domain, documentation and licenses, permissions, violations and penalties, policies and ethics codes, citations, creation and ownership, how to register copyrights, and gives tips for staying out of trouble.

She explains copyright considerations for the web, television, videos and DVDs, computer software, music, books, magazines, and journals--materials that can create a day-to-day challenge for educators and require this resource's careful guidance. Up-to-date coverage includes:

iPods and other hand-held devices (including cell phones that access the Internet) blogs, wikis, Pod-casts, RSS feeds and Nings Second Life and other Internet world environments social networks (FaceBook, MySpace, Twitter, etc.) Moodle, Skype, and similar digital communication tools social bookmarking, web syndication and video streaming TIVO and similar systems deep-linking computer, video games and gaming Open-sourcing / Creative Commons

Butler also covers how to deal with those who would have you break the law; orphan works; file sharing; distance education; digital rights management; the law: classroom exemption, handicap exemption, library exemption, other important federal exemptions in the K-12 schools, parodies, and state laws; copyright lawsuits; relationship of plagiarism to copyright; and copyright and privacy.

Both a self-education tool and a practical guide, the book makes clear just what teachers and librarians can and cannot do in the classroom or library. Essential background is provided for everything from the basic concepts of copyright law to specific applications of it for various types of media. Figures and flowcharts throughout make the book easy to follow and understand. Appendices feature U.S. copyright law excerpts and resources for further information.

Librarian's View
Syndetics Unbound
Displaying 1 of 1