Lesson Plan Course Title: Principles of Information Technology Session Title: Copyright Lesson Duration: 300 minutes [Lesson length is subjective and will vary from instructor to instructor] Performance Objective: Upon completion of this assignment, the student will be able to explain basic copyright laws. Specific Objectives: The student will be able to • Identify works that can receive a copyright • Identify works that cannot receive a copyright • Identify requirements for a work to receive a copyright • Identify how long a copyright will last • Identify the rights a copyright gives to the creator of a work Preparation TEKS Correlations: 130.272 Principles of Information Technology (1) The student demonstrates the necessary skills for career development, employability, and successful completion of course outcomes. The student is expected to (C) employ effective reading and writing skills; (D) employ effective verbal and nonverbal communication skill; (H) demonstrate an understanding of legal and ethical responsibilities in relation to the field of information technology; (3) The student uses emerging technologies to exchang information. The student is expected to (E) demonstrate ability to effectively test acquired information from the Internet for accuracy, relevance, and validity; (H) demonstrate ethical use of Internet and online resources, including citation of source; (5) The student demonstrates knowledge of the different software associated with information systems. The student is expected to (H) identify appropriate use of application software; (10) The student applies presentation management technology. The student is expected to (B) create, save, edit, and produce presentations with appropriate handouts and speaker notes: (C) create a non-linear presentation incorporating links, hyperlinks, audio, and graphics. (12) The student understands and demonstrates legal and ethical procedures as they apply to the use of information technology. The student is expected to (A) demonstrate ethical use of online resources, (B) adhere to copyright rules and regulations, IT: Principles of IT: Copyright Plan Copyright © Texas Education Agency, 2013. All rights reserved. 1 (C) differentiate between copyright and trademarks, (D) explain the concept of intellectual property, (E) examine the consequences of plagiarism. Instructor/Trainer References: 1. http://www.copyright.gov/ U.S.Government Web site 2. http://www.betanews.com/article/Is_the_latest_YouTube_court_ruling_really_a_privacy_concern/1 215103870 U.S. District Court for Southern New York ruling in favor of Viacom against Google and YouTube 3. http://www.copyright.gov/circs/circ1.html Copyright basics - What is Copyright? 4. http://fairuse.stanford.edu/ Stanford University information and links 5. http://www.templetons.com/brad/copymyths.html Myths about copyright explained 6. http://www.copyright.gov/legislation/dmca.pdf Digital Millennium Copyright Act 7. http://www.gseis.ucla.edu/iclp/dmca1.htm Digital Millennium Copyright Act overview 8. http://www.utsystem.edu/ogc/IntellectualProperty/copypol2.htm UT Fair Use policies 9. http://www.grad.uni.edu/ip/copyright_vocabulary.asp Copyright Vocabulary 10. http://www.law.duke.edu/journals/dltr/articles/2001dltr0018.html Phonorecords information 11. http://sciencecommons.org/about/ Science Commons license 12. http://home.earthlink.net/~cnew/research.htm#Fair%20Use%20Matrix%20for%20Teachers Copyright info for educational purposes & Fair use for teachers chart 13. http://www.copyright.gov/legislation/s505.pdf Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act (aka the “Mickey Mouse Copyright Law”) 14. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/ Creative Commons License 15. http://www.plagiarism.org/ Definition of “Plagiarism” 16. http://lib.nmsu.edu/instruction/eval.html Web site evaluation criteria 17. Workshop on “Copyright in the Digital Library Environment”, by Gretchen McCord Hoffmann, hosted by the Arlington Independent School District on July 23, 2008 Instructional Aids: • Copyright Story • Copyright Presentation • Copyright Vocabulary Presentation • Copyright Outline Organizer • Copyright Vocabulary Organizer • Copyright Assignment • Copyright Assignment Rubric • Website Validity Checklist • Books & magazines from outside class relevant to copyright (from school library) Materials Needed: None IT: Principles of IT: Copyright Plan Copyright © Texas Education Agency, 2013. All rights reserved. 2 Equipment Needed: For Instructor: 1. Computer with a. Internet connection b. Presentation software 2. C/D Projector & Screen For Students 1. Pen or pencil 2. Computer with • Internet connection • Presentation software 3. Printer Learner The student must have the skills to create a presentation including graphics, animations, and transitions. Introduction MI Introduction (LSI Quadrant I): Pass out copies of the Copyright Story to each student. Have them read it and answer the two questions at the end. Ask the students how they would feel if something like that ever happened to them. Ask them if they believe things like that happen today. Have several students share their answers to the two questions at the end. Then, share the answers below: 1. Brian is not correct: A. You do not have to register a work to have copyright. B. Sarah did not “give” Brian any rights to the poem. She only communicated the words as an expression of her love. C. Copyrights don’t expire until 70 years after the life of the author. 2. Sarah should seek legal action. After that, review the objectives for this lesson. Outline MI Outline (LSI Quadrant II): Instructor Notes: Instructors can use the Copyright Presentation, Copyright Vocabulary Presentation, Copyright Outline Organizer, and the Copyright Vocabulary Organizer in conjunction with the following outline. Use the Copyright Vocabulary Presentation to present the vocabulary terms. Students will complete the Copyright Vocabulary Organizer. Copyright Vocabulary: IT: Principles of IT: Copyright Plan Copyright © Texas Education Agency, 2013. All rights reserved. 3 1. Copyright (©): A form of protection grounded in the U.S. Constitution and granted by law for original works of authorship fixed in a tangible medium of expression. 2. Fair Use Doctrine: A guideline that determines how much of a copyrighted item can be used legally without permission. 3. First Sale Doctrine: The doctrine allows the purchaser to transfer (i.e., sell or give away) a particular lawfully made copy of the copyrighted work without permission once it has been obtained. That means that a copyright holder's rights to control the change of ownership of a particular copy end once that copy is sold, as long as no additional copies are made. 4. Intellectual Property: Intangible property that is a product of the imagination, (e.g., copyrights, trademarks, and patents). 5. Patent: A monopoly granted by the U.S. Patent Office for a limited time to the creator of a new invention. 6. Permission: Consent to use a work, usually by reprinting or reproducing it in some other work. 7. Phonorecords: Digital phonorecords are a relatively new technology that allows musical works to be played, recorded, and stored in digital format for use on computers or other devices. 8. Plagiarism: To steal and pass off the ideas or words of another as one's own or to use another's production without crediting the source. 9. Public Domain: Works for which copyright protection have expired and works created by officers or employees of the U.S. government as part of their government jobs. 10. Trademark (™): A word or symbol used to identify a product or service in the marketplace. Copyright Outline I. What is Copyright? Use the Copyright Presentation to present the lesson outline. Students will IT: Principles of IT: Copyright Plan Copyright © Texas Education Agency, 2013. All rights reserved. 4 A. Title 17 of the U.S. Code 1. Protection provided by law 2. Protects the authors of “original works” B. What copyright is not: 1. Patent: a short term monopoly 2. Trademark: identifying a product or service in the marketplace C. Available to 1. Published and unpublished works 2. Section 106 of 1976 Copyright Act D. Copyright gives exclusive rights and ability to authorize 1. Reproduction of work in copies or phonorecords 2. Derivative works based upon the work 3. Distribution of copies publicly by sale, transfer of ownership, rental, lease, or lending 4. Performance of the work publicly 5. Display of the work publicly 6. Performance of sound recordings in public by digital audio transmission E. Copyright protects 1. Literary works 2. Dramatic works 3. Musical works 4. Artistic works*: poetry, novels, movies, songs, computer software, and architecture F. Copyright does not protect 1. Ideas 2. Facts 3. Systems G. Methods of operation—When is the work protected? 1. The moment it is created and fixed in a tangible form. 2. It is visible either directly or with the aid of a machine or device. complete the Copyright Outline Organizer. Ask students how plagiarism and copying are similar. Have students theorize how copying movie and music affects the marketplace. Ask students how they can determine whether or not an item is copyrighted. Ask students for examples of ideas, facts, and systems – items that cannot obtain a copyright (e.g., block scheduling system, football record for the year, creating a “green” school). II. Registration of Copyright A. Rights of Registration 1. Registration is voluntary 2. Copyright exists from the moment the work is created. 3. To file a lawsuit for infringement, you will have to register. B. Copyright term depends on many factors 1. Individuals: the life of the author(s) plus an additional 70 years 2. Corporations: for contract-out works and certain other works, copyright protection lasts 95 years from first publication IT: Principles of IT: Copyright Plan Copyright © Texas Education Agency, 2013. All rights reserved. 5 III. Use of Copyrighted Works A. Fair use doctrine 1. A guideline that determines how much a copyrighted item can be used legally without permission 2. Section 107 of Title U.S. code contains exceptions for reproduction of a particular work. B. Exceptions are 1. Criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research 2. Public Domain Items/Works C. Rules of thumb 1. Limit the use of copies to single chapters 2. Single articles from of a journal issue 3. Several charts, graphs, and illustrations 4. Other small parts of a work D. Caveats 1. There is no specific number of words, lines, or notes that may be safely taken without permission. 2. Acknowledging the source of the copyrighted material does not substitute for properly noting copyright. E. Bottom line 1. Document your research at all times (bibliography and footnotes). 2. If you publish copyrighted work on your own website or in another publication, get written permission. Ask how much should be allowed without permission from a song, book, movie, etc. If one of your teachers runs out of textbooks for the class and copies a chapter to give to a student, have they violated copyright? Answer: No After the outline presentation, give each student a copy of the Copyright Assignment, the Copyright Assignment Rubric, and the Website Validity Checklist. Review all three documents with the students. Application MI Guided Practice (LSI Quadrant III): 1. Students will answer questions and participate in class discussion as instructor gives presentation. 2. Students will fill in their organizers as the outline and terms are covered. MI Independent Practice (LSI Quadrant III): Students will complete the Copyright Assignment. Summary MI Review (LSI Quadrants I and IV): IT: Principles of IT: Copyright Plan Copyright © Texas Education Agency, 2013. All rights reserved. 6 Give the students four minutes to write down what they believe are the most important points given in the lesson. Collect their papers and randomly read the comments. Read a variety of the points. Ask what important points were left out. Add any major points that may have not been included. Evaluation MI Informal Assessment (LSI Quadrant III): 1. The instructor will monitor the class during the presentation and questions to determine understanding and will redirect/reteach as needed. 2. The instructor will circle through the class and monitor each student’s progress as they complete the Copyright Assignment. The instructor will redirect/reteach as needed. MI Formal Assessment (LSI Quadrant III, IV): The instructor will grade the Copyright Assignment using the Copyright Assignment Rubric. Extension MI Extension/Enrichment (LSI Quadrant IV): A. Students can look up Texas and National TSA requirements for technology research and report writing, cyberspace pursuit, career comparisons, desktop publishing, prepared presentation, video game design, or other competitive events where copyright laws and regulations may apply. B. Students can investigate careers in law, information technology, news reporting, research, and technical writing. IT: Principles of IT: Copyright Plan Copyright © Texas Education Agency, 2013. All rights reserved. 7 Icon MI Verbal/ Linguistic Logical/ Mathematical Visual/Spatial Musical/ Rhythmic Bodily/ Kinesthetic Intrapersonal Interpersonal Naturalist Existentialist Teaching Strategies Lecture, discussion, journal writing, cooperative learning, word origins Problem solving, number games, critical thinking, classifying and organizing, Socratic questioning Mind-mapping, reflective time, graphic organizers, color-coding systems, drawings, designs, video, DVD, charts, maps Use music, compose songs or raps, use musical language or metaphors Use manipulatives, hand signals, pantomime, real life situations, puzzles and board games, activities, role-playing, action problems Reflective teaching, interviews, reflective listening, KWL charts Cooperative learning, roleplaying, group brainstorming, crosscultural interactions Natural objects as manipulatives and as background for learning Socratic questions, real life situations, global problems/questions Personal Development Strategies Reading, highlighting, outlining, teaching others, reciting information Organizing material logically, explaining things sequentially, finding patterns, developing systems, outlining, charting, graphing, analyzing information Developing graphic organizers, mind-mapping, charting, graphing, organizing with color, mental imagery (drawing in the mind’s eye) Creating rhythms out of words, creating rhythms with instruments, playing an instrument, putting words to existing songs Moving while learning, pacing while reciting, acting out scripts of material, designing games, moving fingers under words while reading Reflecting on personal meaning of information, studying in quiet settings, imagining experiments, visualizing information, journaling Studying in a group, discussing information, using flash cards with other, teaching others Connecting with nature, forming study groups with like-minded people Considering personal relationship to larger context IT: Principles of IT: Copyright Plan Copyright © Texas Education Agency, 2013. All rights reserved. 8 Copyright Story You Stole My Heart and Song It was one of those kinds of songs that after you first hear it, you can’t get it out of your head. You will find yourself humming the melody and walking to the tempo of the beat. We call that a hit record. Sarah Connelly was enjoying one of those kinds of songs after hearing it on the radio while driving to work. At work, the song refused to leave her brain and she would occasionally breath out, “Your love makes me alive; alive, alive” under her breath. It was about 4:30 in the afternoon when she began to realize that the song was very familiar to her… really familiar. She stopped motionless at the thunderous thought, “I wrote that song.” She gave herself a slight correction: “Well… really, I wrote the words to that song.” Sarah was sure she had written those words…somewhere, some time ago when she was in her poetry-writing phase in high school, she was sure she had written those words. Out of curiosity, Sarah pulled into the music store on her way home and looked at the CD that featured the song “Love Alive.” The song CD cover credited the song to a Brian Wells. She stared at the CD cover as if to make sure of what she was seeing. She and Brian had dated in high school, and she had shared several of her poems with him. Sarah bought the CD and hurried home. She quickly drug an old storage box out of the attic and dug through the carefully packed memorabilia until she found a flowery notebook. She flipped through the pages of the notebook like wind and stopped suddenly at one page. There it was… her poem… “Love Alive.” And… she had sent a copy to Brian to express her love to him. All that evening, Sarah had two emotions. She was proud that one of her poems was good enough to make a hit record, and she was furious that Brian stole her poem for the song. The next day, Sarah spent a good part of the day finding contact information for Brian through the record label. She finally sent him an e-mail explaining who she was and reminding him that she had written the words to “Love Alive” and that she should at least be paid royalties. Later that day, Brian responded, “Sarah, how good to hear from you after all these years. You should be very proud that your words are featured in this hit song… it’s doing very well. But you don’t have any claims to royalties because 1. You never registered the poem for a copyright. 2. You gave me the poem as a gift, so it belongs to me. 3. You wrote the poem more than 10 years ago, so any copyright would have expired. However, if you have any other poems or songs, I would be glad to consider them for future projects.” Answer the following questions: What do you think? 1. Is Brian right? 2. What should Sarah do? IT: Principles of IT: Copyright Plan Copyright © Texas Education Agency, 2013. All rights reserved. 9 Copyright Outline Organizer What is Copyright? I. What is copyright? A. Title 17 of the U.S. Code 1. provided by 2. Protects the authors of B. What copyright is not: 1. Patent: 2. Trademark: a product or service in the C. Available to 1. and works 2. Section 106 of D. Copyright gives exclusive rights and ability to authorize 7. ____________ ____________work in copies or ____________ 8. ____________ ____________ based upon the work 9. Distribution of copies ____________ by sale, transfer of ownership, rental, lease, or lending 10. of the work publicly 11. of the work publicly 12.____________ ____________ sound recordings ____________ ____________ by digital audio transmission IT: Principles of IT: Copyright Plan Copyright © Texas Education Agency, 2013. All rights reserved. 10 E. Copyright protects 1. works 2. works 3. works 4. Artistic works: , , , , and F. Copyright does not protect 1. 2. 3. 4. G. When is the work protected? 1. The moment it is and in a tangible form 2. It is either directly or with the aid of a IT: Principles of IT: Copyright Plan Copyright © Texas Education Agency, 2013. All rights reserved. 11 II. Registration of Copyright C. Rights of Registration 1. Registration is 2. Copyright exists from the 3. To file a lawsuit for infringement, you will have to ____________. D. Copyright term depends on many factors: 1. Individuals: the plus an additional years. 2. Corporations: for contract works and certain other works, copyright protection lasts years from III. Use of Copyrighted Works F. Fair Use Doctrine 1. Is a that determines how much a item can be used legally without 2. Section 107 of Title U.S. code contains for of a particular work. G. Exceptions are 1. , , , , and 2. Public domain items/works IT: Principles of IT: Copyright Plan Copyright © Texas Education Agency, 2013. All rights reserved. 12 H. Rules of thumb 1. Limit the use of copies to 2. of a journal issue 3. Several , 4. Other , and of a work I. Caveats 1. There is no specific number of __________, ________, or that may be taken without permission. 2. Acknowledging the source of the copyrighted material does not substitute for J. Bottom Line 1. your research at all times (bibliography and foot notes). 2. If you publish copyrighted work on your own website or in another publication, IT: Principles of IT: Copyright Plan Copyright © Texas Education Agency, 2013. All rights reserved. 13 Copyright Vocabulary Organizer 1. Copyright (©): A form of ____________ grounded in the U.S. Constitution and granted by law for original works of ____________ fixed in a tangible medium of expression. 2. Fair Use: A ____________ that determines how much of a copyrighted item can be used legally without permission. 3. First Sale Doctrine: 4. Intellectual Property: The doctrine allows a ____________ to transfer a lawfully made copy of the copyrighted work without permission once it has been obtained. A copyright holder’s rights to control the change of ownership of a particular work end once that copy is sold, as long as no ____________ ____________copies are made. Intangible property that is a product of the ____________ (e.g.., copyrights, trademarks and patents). 5. Patent: A ____________ granted by the U.S. Patent Office for a limited time to the creator of a new ____________. 6. Permission: Consent to use a work, usually by ____________ or ____________ it in some other work. IT: Principles of IT: Copyright Plan Copyright © Texas Education Agency, 2013. All rights reserved. 14 7. Phonorecords: Digital phonorecords are a relatively new ____________ that allows musical works to be played, recorded, and stored in ____________ format for use on computers or other devices. 8. Plagiarism: To ____________ and pass off the ideas or words of another as one’s own or to use another’s production without crediting the source. 9. Public Domain: Works for which copyright protection has ____________ and works created by officers or employees of the U.S. government as part of their government jobs. 10. Trademark (™): A word or ____________ used to identify a product or service in the marketplace. IT: Principles of IT: Copyright Plan Copyright © Texas Education Agency, 2013. All rights reserved. 15 Copyright Assignment I. Objective: Students will study copyright laws and research their purpose, regulations, effects, and penalties. II. Assignment: A. Create a presentation on one of the following topics: (No more than 3 students can research the same topic in the same class period) 1. Copyright laws in general 2. Sonny Bono Copyright Extension Act of 1998 (aka the “Mickey Mouse” Extension Act) 3. “Fair Use” doctrine and tests 4. Research papers for education 5. Phonorecords & digital phonorecords (records, tapes, CDs, Mp3) 6. Research for education, public service, or non-profit purposes 7. Peer-to-Peer coping and sharing (CDs, DVDs, music videos, ring tones, Internet information) 8. Dramatic and artistic works (art, photography, plays, musicals, choreography, movies) 9. Architectural drawings and diagrams 10. Other copyright related topic approved by instructor B. Include presentation on the following as they apply to your topic: 1. Which copyright law/regulation applies? 2. Why are copyright laws important to this topic? 3. How can copyright be infringed? 4. How does “Public Domain” apply to your topic? 5. Does “Fair Use” apply to this topic? (If yes, how does “Fair Use” apply?) 6. What are the penalties for infringement? 7. How can infringement be prevented? 8. Who can you contact for permission? 9. How do copyright rules affect teens on this topic? III. Additional Requirements: A. References 1. Evaluate all reference web sites using “Web Site Validity Checklist” worksheet 2. Bibliography slide a. Display all references used in presentation b. Have at least 5 references c. Use bibliography form approved by your instructor d. Number each reference e. Display as last slide of presentation 3. Footnotes a. For Internet references, place URL at bottom of the slide b. For hard copy references, place bibliography number at bottom of the slide 4. Do not use Wikipedia.com B. Length 1. Must be at least 3 minutes long to receive minimum credit 2. Should be 4 to 7 minutes long to receive full credit C. Slides 1. Must have a “Title Slide” 2. Must have enough “body” slides to convey your message 3. Must have a bibliography slide (last slide) IV. Presentation: A. Deliver your presentation to the rest of the class (Option to present to another class or another group approved by instructor) IT: Principles of IT: Copyright Plan Copyright © Texas Education Agency, 2013. All rights reserved. 16 Student: ______________________________________________________ Period: __________________ Copyright Assignment Rubric Total possible points is 100 5 Points 4 Points 2-3 Points 0-1 Point Awarded CONTENT • Objective clearly covered Superior Suitable Mediocre Inadequate • Topic clearly covered Superior Suitable Mediocre Inadequate • Font (type/size/contrast) Superior Suitable Dark/Light Wrong font • Appropriate graphics Superior Suitable Dark/Light Inappropriate • Accurate research Superior Suitable Mediocre Inadequate • Content useful to viewer(s) Superior Suitable Mediocre Inadequate TECHNICAL • Transitions work properly Superior Suitable Mediocre Inadequate • Animations are logical and creative Superior Suitable Mediocre Inadequate • Timing for viewing logical Appropriate Fast/Slow Hard to follow Inadequate • Contains all presentation elements – (introduction, body, conclusion) 3 2 1 0 • 3 to 7 minutes in length >4 3-4 2-3 0-2 GRAPHICS/BACKGROUND • Graphics enhance topic Superior Suitable Mediocre Inadequate • Background complements Superior Suitable Mediocre Inadequate • Appropriate contrast Superior Suitable Mediocre Inadequate LAYOUT/DESIGN • Pleasing to the eye Superior Suitable Mediocre Inadequate • Easy to navigate Superior Suitable Mediocre Inadequate • Elements of appropriate size Superior Suitable Mediocre Inadequate • Grammar / Spelling / Punctuation Superior Suitable Mediocre Inadequate RESEARCH/REFERENCES • Bibliography (# of sources) 5+ ---0--- ---0--- ---0--- • Use of footnotes/URL notes Superior Suitable Mediocre Inadequate Grade (total points awarded) IT: Principles of IT: Copyright Plan Copyright © Texas Education Agency, 2013. All rights reserved. 17 Web Site Validity Check List Report Topic: Site URL: Name/Title of site: V N Criteria Who owns the domain? (“Who is <URL>” use search engine – reliable or dubious) Is the site a paid ad or infomercial? (big negative) Is the name of the author listed? (biggie for valid research) Who wrote the pages? (right click, view source, – check “META” tag names) Is the author an expert? (“Who is <author>” search engine – reliable or dubious) What is the purpose of the site? (stated by the author) Does the overall site reflect a bias? (judgment call) When was the site created? (judge for most recent facts needed) When was the site last updated? (judge for most recent facts needed) From where does the information come? (Check – believable/valid resources?) Is the information useful for my assignment? (your opinion) Total V,N Conclusion: V=Valid … N=Not Valid Add site to Bibliography: YES (do the valid marks outweigh the not valid marks?) NO Validated Web Site Notes IT: Principles of IT: Copyright Plan Copyright © Texas Education Agency, 2013. All rights reserved. 18