AR 6162.6
Instruction
Use of Copyrighted
Materials
Each employee making a
reproduction shall first determine whether the copying is permitted by law
based on the guidelines below. If the copying is not permitted
according to these guidelines, the principal/designee may request permission to
reproduce the material from its copyright holders.
Requests for permission to
use copyrighted materials shall include the following information:
1. Title,
author(s), editor(s) or publisher, producer(s) or distributor.
2. Edition,
copyright and/or production year.
3. Exact
amount of material to be used (i.e., lines, pages, running time, etc.).
4. Nature
of the use (i.e., how many times, when and with whom the material will be
used).
5. Number of copies to be made.
6. How
the material will be reproduced.
7. If
an initial contact was made by phone, the request shall also include the name
of the initial contact person.
The following guidelines
differentiate between permitted and prohibited uses of printed material, sheet
and recorded music, videotapes, films, filmstrips or slide programs, off-air
taping (radio or television), and computer software.
PRINTED MATERIALS
Permitted Use:
1. Single
copies at the request of an individual teacher:
a. A chapter of a book.
b. An article from a magazine or newspaper.
c. A short story, short essay or short poem,
whether or not from a collective work.
d. A chart, graph, diagram, drawing, cartoon
or a picture from a book, magazine or newspaper.
2. Multiple copies at the request of an
individual teacher for classroom use, not to exceed one copy per student in a
course:
a. A complete poem if less than 250 words and
if printed on not more than two pages.
b. An excerpt from a longer poem, not to
exceed 250 words.
c. A complete article, story or essay of
less than 2,500 words.
d. An excerpt from a larger prose work not to
exceed ten percent of the whole or 1,000 words, whichever is less, but
in any event a minimum
of 500 words.
e. One chart, graph, diagram, cartoon or
picture per book or magazine issue.
All
preceding copies must bear the copyright notice. They may be made only at the discretion of the
individual teacher on occasions when a delay to request permission would
preclude their most effective instructional use.
Prohibited Uses:
1. Copying
more than one work or two excerpts from a single author during one class term.
2. Copying
more than three works from a collective work or periodical volume during one
class term.
3. Copying
materials for more than one course in the school where the copies are made.
4. More
than nine sets of multiple copies for distribution to students in one class
term.
5. Copying
used to create, replace or substitute for anthologies or collective works.
6. Copying
of "consumable" works such as workbooks, standardized tests, answer
sheets, etc.
7. Copying
that substitutes for the purchase of books, publishers' reprints or periodicals.
8. Repeated
copying of the same item by the same teacher from term to term.
The above prohibitions do
not apply to current news magazines and newspapers.
SHEET AND RECORDED MUSIC
Permitted Uses:
1. Emergency
copies for an imminent performance are permitted, provided they are replacing
purchased copies and replacement is planned.
2. Multiple
copies (one per student) of excerpts not constituting an entire performable unit
or more than ten percent of the total work may be made for academic
purposes other than performances.
3. Purchased
sheet music may be edited or simplified provided the character of the work is
not distorted or lyrics added or altered.
4. A
single copy of a recorded performance by students may be retained by the
district or individual teacher for evaluation or rehearsal purposes.
5. A
single copy of recordings of copyrighted music owned by the district or
individual teacher may be made and retained for the purpose of constructing exercises or
examinations.
6. A
single copy of an excerpt that constitutes an entire performable unit (i.e., a movement or aria) may be made,
provided it is either:
(1) Confirmed by the copyright proprietor to be out of
print, or
(2) Unavailable except in a larger work. This may be done
by or for a teacher only for scholarly
research or in preparation for teaching a class.
7. A
single copy of a portion of a sound recording may be made by or for a student,
i.e., a song from a record, but not the entire recording. The copy may be used in the
educational context in which it was made and may not be sold or performed for
profit.
PROHIBITED USES:
1. Copying
to replace or substitute for anthologies or collections.
2. Copying
from works intended to be "consumable."
3. Copying
for purposes of performance except as noted in an emergency.
4. Copying
to substitute for purchase of music.
5. Copying
without inclusion of copyright notice on the copy.
6. Duplication
of tapes, unless reproduction rights were given at time of purchase.
7. Reproduction
of musical works or conversion to another format, e.g. record to tape.
VIDEOTAPES, FILMS, FILMSTRIPS
OR SLIDE PROGRAMS
PERMITTED USES:
1. A
single copy of a portion of a copyrighted film or filmstrip may be made by a
student for educational purposes if the material is owned by the school
which the student attends.
2. A
single copy of a small portion of a film or filmstrip may be made by or for a teacher for scholarly or teaching
purposes.
3. Selected
slides may be reproduced from a series if reproduction does not exceed ten
percent of the total or excerpt the essence of the work.
4.
A slide or overhead
transparency series may be created from multiple sources as long as creation
does not exceed ten percent of photographs
in one source (book, magazine, filmstrip, etc.). This may not be done when the
source forbids photographic reproduction.
5. A
single overhead transparency may be created from a single page of a
"consumable" workbook.
6. Sections
of a film may be excerpted for a local videotape (not to be shown over cable)
if they do not exceed ten percent of the total or excerpt the essence of the work. Extreme care must be
exercised in copying a small portion of a film or filmstrip; small portions may
contain the very essence of
the material in question.
PROHIBITED USES:
1. Reproduction
of an audiovisual work in its entirety.
2. Conversion
from one media format to another, e.g., film to videotape, unless permission is secured.
3. No
one is permitted to copy any portion of a film or filmstrip sent to the school
for preview or rented or owned by another school or institution without the express written permission of the
copyright holder. The copyright of a film governs its performance (showing) as well as the copying of it. It is permissible
to show a film to students using closed-circuit television if the system is
confined to one building.
Showing a film via closed-circuit television outside the building is not
permitted.
RADIO - OFF-AIR TAPING
PERMITTED USES:
1. A
single copy of a small portion of a copyrighted radio program may be made by a
student for educational purposes. Such a copy may not be sold or performed for profit.
2. Copies
of broadcasts by national public radio may be made by district employees and
retained for an indefinite period for educational purposes.
PROHIBITED USES:
1. Copying
broadcasts on commercial radio, except for copyrighted musical selections (see Sheet
and Recorded Music), is governed by the same copyright laws that apply to off-air
taping of commercial television; however, there is no special
provision allowing libraries to tape
radio news programs.
TELEVISION - OFF-AIR
TAPING
PERMITTED USES:
1. A
broadcast program may be recorded off-air simultaneously with broadcast
transmission (including simultaneous cable retransmission) and retained for a period not to exceed
45 days. All off-air recordings shall be erased or destroyed at the end of the
retention period. Broadcast programs
are television programs transmitted for reception by the general public without
charge.
2. Off-air
recordings may be used once by individual teachers in the course of relevant
teaching activities and repeated once only when instructional reinforcement is necessary. These recordings
may be shown in classrooms and similar places devoted to instruction within a single building, cluster, or campus, as well
as in the homes of students receiving formalized home instruction, during the
first ten consecutive school
days in the 45 calendar-day retention period.
3. Off-air
recordings may be made only at the request of individual teachers, for use by
those teachers. No broad-cast program may be recorded
off-air more than once at the request of the same teacher, regardless of the
number of times the program may be broadcast.
4. A
limited number of copies may be reproduced from each off-air recording to meet
the legitimate needs of teachers under these guidelines.
Each such additional copy shall be subject to all provisions governing the
original recording.
5. After
the first ten consecutive school days, off-air recordings may be used up to the
end of the 45 calendar day retention period only for teacher evaluation purposes; i.e., to determine whether or not
to include the broadcast program in the teaching curriculum; they may not be used for student exhibition or any
other none valuation purpose without authorization.
6. All
copies of off-air recordings shall include the copyright notice on the
broadcast programs as recorded.
PROHIBITED USES:
1. Off-air
recording in anticipation of teacher requests.
2. Using
the recording for instruction after the ten-day use period.
3. Holding
the recording for weeks or indefinitely because:
a. Units needing the program concepts are
not taught within the ten-day use period.
b. An interruption or technical problems delayed
its use.
c. Another
teacher wishes to use it, or for any other supposedly "legitimate"
educational reason.
4. On
occasion a special notice is provided with some materials specifically
prohibiting reproduction of any kind. Permission to use any part of such works must be secured in
writing from the author or producer in accordance with this regulation.
5. Off-air
recordings need not be used in their entirety, but the content of recorded programs may not be altered. Off- air
recordings may not be physically or
electronically combined or merged to constitute teaching anthologies or
compilations.
SOFTWARE COPYRIGHT
PERMITTED USES:
Copies of district-owned
software may be made only when:
1. The
copy is needed as an essential step in using the computer program with a
particular machine. This copy is to be used in no other way.
2. The
copy is used for archival or "backup" purposes. This copy may be held
only as a file copy and must be destroyed when the program is no longer rightfully owned by the
district unless the copyright owner authorizes its sale, lease or transfer as
part of the sale, lease or transfer
of the original program. (United States Code, Title 17, Section 117).
PROHIBITED USES:
1. Copies
of copyrighted programs may not be made for any purpose other than the two
permitted above.
2. When
permission is obtained from the copyright holder to use software on a
disk-sharing system, efforts will be made to secure software from copying.
3. Illegal
copies of copyrighted programs shall not be made or used on school equipment.
Adopted: 4/13/88
Revised: 10/13/99; 6/14/06