The Educator's Guide to Copyright and Fair Use

 

The Copyright Quiz

 

Answer True or False to the following 20 questions.

 

Part I: Computers and Software

 

1. A student snaps in half a CD-ROM the teacher really needed for her next class. 

The teacher decides to make a back-up copy of all her crucial disks so it never 

happens again. This is permissible.   T / F         

 

2. A technology coordinator installs the one copy of Photoshop the school owns on a 

central server so students are able to access it from their classroom workstations. This 

is a violation of copyright law.            T / F

 

3. A school has a site license for Keynote 3.0. A teacher buys

 five copies of Keynote 4.0, which is more powerful, and installs them on five workstations 

in the computer lab. But now when students at these workstations create a project and 

bring it back to their classrooms, the computers (running 3.0) won't read the work! To 

end the chaos, it's permissible to install 4.0 on all machines.            T / F

 

4. The state mandates technology proficiency for all high school students but adds no 

money to schools' software budgets. To ensure equity, public schools are allowed to 

buy what software they can afford and copy the rest.                 T / F

 

5. A geography teacher has more students and computers than software. He uses a CD 

burner to make several copies of a copyright interactive CD-ROM so each student can 

use an individual copy in class. This is fair use.          T / F

 

Part II: The Internet

 

6. A middle school science class studying ocean ecosystems must gather material for 

multimedia projects. The teacher downloads pictures and information on marine life 

from various commercial and noncommercial sites to store in a folder for students to 

access. This is fair use.            T / F

 

7. An elementary school designs a password-protected Web site for families and 

faculty only. It's OK for teachers to post student work there, even when it uses 

copyright material without permission.            T / F

 

8. A student film buff downloads a new release from a Taiwanese Web site to use 

for a humanities project. As long as the student gives credit to the sites from which 

he's downloaded material, this is covered under fair use.     T / F

 

9. A technology coordinator downloads audio clips from iTunes to integrate into

 a curriculum project. This is fair use.                  T / F

 

10. A teacher gets clip art and music from popular file-sharing sites, then creates a 

lesson plan and posts it on the school Web site to share with other teachers. This is 

permissible.               T / F

 

Part III: Video

 

11. A teacher videotapes a rerun of Frontier House, the PBS reality show that profiles 

three modern families living as homesteaders from the 1880s did. In class, students 

edit themselves "into" the frontier and make fun of the spoiled family from California. 

This is fair use.       T / F

 

12. A student tries to digitize the shower scene from a rented copy of Psycho into a 

"History of Horror" report. Her computer won't do it. The movie happens to be on 

an NBC station that week, so the teacher tapes it and then digitizes it on the computer 

for her. This is fair use.                      T / F

 

13. A history class videotapes a Holocaust survivor who lives in the community. The 

students digitally compress the interview, and, with the interviewee's permission, post 

it on the Web. Another school discovers the interview online and uses it in their 

History Day project. This is fair use.            T / F

14. On Back-to-School night, an elementary school offers child care for students' 

younger siblings. They put the kids in the library and show them Disney VHS tapes 

bought by the PTA. This is permissible.               T / F

 

15. A teacher makes a compilation of movie clips from various VHS tapes to use in 

his classroom as lesson starters. This is covered under fair use.                 T / F

 

Part IV: Multimedia

 

16. At a local electronics show, a teacher buys a machine that defeats the copy 

protection on DVDs, CD-ROMs, and just about everything else. She lets her 

students use it so they can incorporate clips from rented DVDs into their film 

genre projects. This is fair use.                  T / F

 

17. A number of students take digital pictures of local streets and businesses for 

their Web projects. These are permissible to post online.                        T / F

 

18. A student wants to play a clip of ethnic music to represent her family's country of 

origin. Her teacher has a CD that meets her needs. It is fair use for the student to copy 

and use the music in her project.            T / F

 

19. A high school video class produces a DVD yearbook that includes the year's top 

ten music hits as background music. This is fair use.            T / F

 

20. Last year, a school's science fair multimedia CD-ROM was so popular everyone 

wanted a copy of it. Everything in it was copied under fair use guidelines. It's permissible 

for the school to sell copies to recover the costs of reproduction.             T / F

 

 

Adapted from: http://www.techlearning.com

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