CC Overview for Roane State Faculty

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Webinar given on October 17, 2013 (1:00pmEDT / 10:00amPDT) to Roane State faculty and other TA program grantees as part of http://open4us.org. I give a basic overview of Creative Commons, Creative Commons license use in education, and Creative Common’s integral role in the Open Educational Resources (OER) movement. I explain the Creative Commons Attribution license (CC BY) requirement for TAACCCT program grantees, how the CC BY license works, and the free support CC will offer to grantees around application of the license to grantee materials. Link to recording: https://sas.elluminate.com/site/external/jwsdetect/nativeplayback.jnlp?sid=2008170&psid=2013-10-17.0955.M.5E7B928FC11E94D844B1405E5A750C.vcr

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Webinar    Interface  Orienta.on  

Whiteboard  

Chat  type  in  here  and  press  return  

List  of  par4cipants  

Talk  –     click  talk  bu:on  to  start  talking  click  it  again  to  relinquish  

Raise  hand  to  stop  speaker  and  make  a  comment  or  ask  a  ques4on    

Jane Park Project Manager at CC School of Open http://schoolofopen.org janepark@creativecommons.org

4

http://open4us.org

q  What is CC BY? q  What is Creative Commons? What

does it do? How does it work? q  Who can use CC? q  How is CC used in education? q  What support can I expect from

CC?

1.  CC BY license requirement 2.  Creative Commons overview 3.  The CC licenses, esp. CC BY 4.  CC & Open Educational Resources 5.  Our free services

The CC BY license requirement

“All successful applicants must allow broad access for others to use and enhance project products and offerings, including authorizing for-profit derivative uses of the courses and associated learning materials by licensing newly developed materials produced with grant funds with a Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY).”

http://www.doleta.gov/taaccct/applicantinfo.cfm

The CC BY license requirement

“This license allows subsequent users to copy, distribute, transmit and adapt the copyrighted work and requires such users to attribute the work in the manner specified by the Grantee.”

http://www.doleta.gov/taaccct/applicantinfo.cfm

“Only work that is developed by the grantee with the grant funds is required to be licensed under the CC BY license.”

http://www.doleta.gov/taaccct/applicantinfo.cfm

This requirement applies to:

This requirement does not apply to:

ü  Pre-existing copyrighted materials licensed to, or purchased by the grantee from third parties, including

ü  Modifications of such materials ü  Works created by the grantee without grant funds

Why CC BY?

1.  CC BY license requirement 2.  Creative Commons overview 3.  The CC licenses, esp. CC BY 4.  CC & Open Educational Resources 5.  Our free services

q  What is Creative Commons? q  What does it do? q  How does it work? q  Who can use CC?

We make sharing content easy, legal, and scalable.

What do we do?

Technically, it’s so easy to share!

Legally? "Not so easy."

CAll rights reserved

$750-$150,000 per copyright infringement"

The problem:

Traditional © designed for old

distribution models now governs the Internet"

With Creative Commons, creators can grant copy and

reuse permissions in advance.

Free copyright licenses that creators can attach to their

works.

How do we do it?

least&free&

Most free&

Least free&

Attribution

Non-Commercial No Derivative Works

Share Alike

Step 1: Choose Conditions

http://creativecommons.org/choose

Anyone. Anywhere in the world.

Even machines can read CC licenses! Let me explain…

Who can use CC licenses?

CC licenses are unique because they are expressed in three ways.

"

"

Lawyer Readable Legal Code

Human Readable Deed

Machine Readable Metadata

Optional fields

41

42

74 jurisdictions"

500 million works"

Who uses Creative Commons?"

Wikipedia: Over 77,000 contributors working on over 22 million articles in 285 languages "

1.  CC BY license requirement 2.  Creative Commons overview 3.  The CC licenses, esp. CC BY 4.  CC & Open Educational

Resources (OER) 5.  Our free services

Open Educational Resources (OER)!

✓  Customization ✓  Accessible versions ✓  Translations ✓  Evolution of resource over time ✓  Affordable versions ✓  Innovation ✓  Discoverability

http://creativecommons.org/education

http://open4us.org/find-oer"

Why CC BY?

ü Easy, Legal, Scalable ü Public access to publicly funded

educational materials ü Making reuse and innovation

possible

Why CC BY?

1.  CC BY license requirement 2.  Creative Commons overview 3.  The CC licenses, esp. CC BY 4.  CC & Open Educational Resources 5.  Our free services

✓  Understand CC licenses ✓  Apply CC BY to your materials ✓  Find existing OER to use ✓  Attribute other CC-licensed works ✓  Follow best practices for above

In addition to giving webinars… we will help you:

✓  Direct email & phone assistance taa@creativecommons.org ✓  More custom webinars ✓  On-site assistance ✓  http://open4us.org

We will do this through:

http://open4us.org/faq"

Creative Commons and the double C in a circle are registered trademarks of

Creative Commons in the United States and other countries. Third party marks and brands are the property of their respective holders.

Please attribute Creative Commons with a link to

creativecommons.org

Photo: “fuzzy copyright”"Author: Nancy Sims"Source: http://www.flickr.com/photos/pugno_muliebriter/1384247192/ "License: CC BY-NC http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0 ""Photo: “Students in Jail”"Author: Judy Baxter"Source: http://www.flickr.com/photos/judybaxter/501511984/in/photostream/"License: CC BY-NC-SA http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/ "

Attributions"

FAQ: Who do we put as the author of our materials (eg. consortium,

college, faculty)?

Up to your consortium or college’s policy. Grant doesn’t stipulate.

FAQ: How do we credit the U.S. DOL as a funder of our materials?

See Section I.D.6 of the Round 2 SGA: Required Disclaimer for Grant Deliverables

“The grantee must include the following language on all Work developed in whole or in part with grant funds…”

“This product was funded by a grant awarded by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Employment and Training Administration. The product was created by the grantee and does not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Labor. The Department of Labor makes no guarantees, warranties, or assurances of any kind, express or implied, with respect to such information, including any information on linked sites and including, but not limited to, accuracy of the information or its completeness, timeliness, usefulness, adequacy, continued availability, or ownership.”

Required Disclaimer for Grant Deliverables (p. 9)

This is separate from and has nothing to do with the CC BY license notice. You can include it in the same section where you usually add your disclaimers or notices.

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