603.14 - Use of Information Resources

In order for students to experience a diverse curriculum, the board encourages employees to supplement regular curricular materials with other resources. In so doing, the board recognizes that federal laws make it illegal to duplicate copyrighted materials without authorization of the holder of the copyright, except for certain exempt purposes. Severe penalties may be imposed for plagiarism and unauthorized copying of or use of media, including but not limited to, print, electronic, and web-based materials, unless the copying or use conforms to "fair use" doctrine. Under the "fair use" doctrine, unauthorized reproduction of copyrighted materials is permissible for such purposes as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, or research providing that all fair use guidelines are met.

While the district encourages employees to enrich the learning programs by making proper use of supplementary materials, it is the responsibility of employees to abide by the school district’s copying procedures and obey the requirements of law. In no circumstances shall it be necessary for school district staff to violate copyright requirements in order to perform their duties properly. The school district will not be responsible for any violations of copyright law by employees or students. Violation of copyright law by employees may result in discipline, up to and including, termination. Violation of copyright law by students may result in discipline, up to and including, suspension or expulsion.

Parents or others who wish to record, by any means, school programs or other activities need to realize that even though the school district received permission to perform a copyrighted work, it does not mean outsiders can copy it and replay it. Those who wish to do so should contact the employee in charge of the activity to determine what the process is to ensure the copyright law is followed. The school district is not responsible for outsiders violating copyright law or this policy.

Any employee or student who is uncertain as to whether reproducing or using copyrighted material complies with the school district procedures or is permissible under the law should contact their building’s media specialist who will assist them in obtaining proper authorization to copy or use protected materials when such authorization is required.

It is the responsibility of the superintendent [or designee] in conjunction with the media specialists to develop administrative regulations regarding this policy.


Adopted: 7/07
Reviewed: 7/11; 9/12; 9/13; 2/15; 4/18; 6/21
Revised: 1/10; 2/24
Related Policy: 603.14-R
Legal Reference (Code of Iowa): 17 USC § 101 et al; 281 IAC 12.3(12)
IASB Reference: 605.07

603.14-R - Regulations Regarding Use of Information Resources

Employees and students may make copies of copyrighted materials that fall within the following guidelines. Where there is reason to believe the material to be copied does not fall within these guidelines, prior permission will be obtained from the publisher or producer with the assistance of the media specialist. Employees and students who fail to follow these procedures may be held personally liable for copyright infringement and may be subject to discipline by the board.

Under the "fair use" doctrine, unauthorized reproduction of copyrighted materials is permissible for such purposes as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, or research. Under the "fair use" doctrine, each of the following four standards must be met in order to use copyrighted materials:

  1. Purpose and Character of the Use: The use must be for such purposes as teaching or scholarship
  2. Nature of the Copyrighted Work: The type of work to be copied
  3. Amount and Substantiality of the Portion Used: Copying the whole of a work cannot be considered fair use, copying a small portion may be if these guidelines are followed
  4. Effect of the Use Upon the Potential Market for or Value of the Copyrighted Work: If resulting economic loss to the copyright holder can be shown, even making a single copy of certain materials may be an infringement and making multiple copies presents the danger of greater penalties

AUTHORIZED REPRODUCTION AND USE OF COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL REMINDERS

  1. Materials on the internet should be used with caution since they may, and likely are, copyrighted.
  2. Proper attribution (author, title, publisher, place, and date of publication) should always be given.
  3. Notice should be taken of any alterations to copyrighted works and such alterations should only be made for specific instructional objectives.
  4. Care should be taken in circumventing any technological protection measures. While materials copied pursuant to fair use may be copied after circumventing technological protections against unauthorized copying, technological protection measures to block access to materials may not be circumvented.

In preparing for instruction a teacher may make, or have made, a single copy of:

  • A chapter from a book
  • An article from a newspaper or periodical
  • A short story, short essay, or short poem
  • A chart, graph, diagram, drawing, cartoon or picture from a book, periodical, or newspaper

A teacher may make multiple copies not to exceed more than one per pupil for classroom use or discussion if the copying meets the tests of brevity, spontaneity, and cumulative effect set by the following guidelines. Each copy must include a notice of copyright.

  1. Brevity:
  • A complete poem if less than 250 words and two pages long may be copied; excerpts from longer poems cannot exceed 250 words.
  • Complete articles, stories, or essays of less than 2,500 words or excerpts from prose works less than 1,000 words or 10% of the work, whichever is less, may be copied in any event the minimum is 500 words.
  • Each numerical limit may be expanded to permit the completion of an unfinished line of a poem or prose paragraph.
  • One chart, graph, diagram, drawing, cartoon, or picture per book or periodical issue may be copied. Special works cannot be reproduced in-full, this includes children’s books combining poetry, prose, or poetic prose. Short special works may be copied up to two published pages containing not more than 10% of the work.
  1. Spontaneity: Should be at the instance and inspiration of the individual teacher when there is not a reasonable length of time to request and receive permission to copy.
     
  2. Cumulative Effect: Teachers are limited to using copied materials for only one course for which the copies are made. No more than one short poem, article, story, or two excerpts from the same author may be copied and no more than three works can be copied from a collective work or periodical column during one class term. Teachers are limited to nine instances of multiple copying for one course during one class term. Limitations do not apply to current news periodicals, newspapers, and current news sections of other periodicals.

COPYING LIMITATIONS
Circumstances will arise when employees are uncertain whether or not copying is prohibited. In these circumstances, the media specialists should be contacted.

The following prohibitions have been expressly stated in federal guidelines:

  1. Reproduction of copyrighted material will not be used to create or substitute for anthologies, compilations, or collective works.
  2. Unless expressly permitted by agreement with the publisher and authorized by district action, there shall be no copying from copyrighted, consumable materials such as workbooks, exercises, test booklets, answer sheets, and the like.
  3. Employees shall not:
    1. Use copies to substitute for the purchase of books, periodicals, musical recordings, or consumable works such as workbooks, computer software, or other copyrighted material.
    2. Copy or use the same item from term-to-term without the copyright owner’s permission.
    3. Copy or use more than nine instances of multiple copying of protected material in any one term.
    4. Copy or use more than one short work or two excerpts from works of the same author in any one term.
    5. Copy or use protected material without including a notice of copyright. The following is a satisfactory notice: Notice: This material may be protected by copyright law.
    6. Reproduce or use copyrighted material at the direction of someone in higher authority or copy/use such material in emulation of another teacher’s use of copyrighted material without permission of the copyright owner.
    7. Require other employees or students to violate copyright law or fair use guidelines.

AUTHORIZED REPRODUCTION AND USE OF COPYRIGHTED MATERIALS IN THE LIBRARY

A library may make a single copy or three digital copies of:

  1. An unpublished work in its collection.
  2. A published work in order to replace it because it is damaged, deteriorated, lost, or stolen provided that an unused replacement cannot be obtained at a fair price.
  3. A work that is being considered for acquisition although use is strictly limited to that decision. Technological protection measures may be circumvented for purposes of copying materials in order to make an acquisition decision.

A library may provide a single copy of copyrighted material to a student or employee at no more than the actual cost of photocopying. The copy must be limited to one article of a periodical issue or a small part of other material unless the library finds that the copyrighted work cannot be obtained elsewhere at a fair price. In the latter circumstance, the entire work may be copied. In any case, the copy shall contain the notice of copyright and the student or staff member shall be notified that the copy is to be used only for private study, scholarship, or research. Any other use may subject the person to liability for copyright infringement.

AUTHORIZED REPRODUCTION AND USE OF COPYRIGHTED MUSIC OR DRAMATIC WORKS

Teachers may:

  1. Make a single copy of a song, movement, or short section from a printed musical or dramatic work that is unavailable except in a larger work for purposes of preparing for instruction.
  2. Make multiple copies for classroom use of an excerpt of not more than 10% of a printed musical work if it is to be used for academic purposes other than performance provided that the excerpt does not comprise a part of the whole musical work, which would constitute a performable unit such as a complete section, movement, or song.
  3. In an emergency, a teacher may make and use replacement copies of printed music for an imminent musical performance when the purchased copies have been lost, destroyed, or are otherwise not available.
  4. Make and retain a single recording of student performances of copyrighted material when it is made for purposes of evaluation or rehearsal.
  5. Make and retain a single copy of excerpts from recordings of copyrighted musical works for use as aural exercises or examination questions.
  6. Edit or simplify purchased copies of music or plays provided that the fundamental character of the work is not distorted. Lyrics shall not be altered or added if none exist.

Performance by teachers or students of copyrighted musical or dramatic works is permitted without the authorization of the copyright owner as part of a teaching activity in a classroom or instructional setting. The purpose shall be instructional rather than for entertainment.

Performances of non-dramatic musical works that are copyrighted are permitted without the authorization of the copyright owner provided that:

  1. The performance is not for a commercial purpose
  2. None of the performers, promoters, or organizers are compensated
  3. Admission fees are used for educational or charitable purposes only

All other musical and dramatic performances require permission from the copyright owner. Parents or others wishing to record a performance should check with the sponsor to ensure compliance with copyright law.

RECORDING OF COPYRIGHTED PROGRAMS
Television programs, excluding news programs transmitted by commercial and non-commercial television stations for reception by the general public without charge may be recorded off-air simultaneously with broadcast transmission (including simultaneous cable retransmission) and retained by a school for a period not to exceed the first 45 consecutive calendar days after date of recording. Upon conclusion of this retention period, all off-air recordings must be erased or destroyed immediately. Certain programming such as that provided on public television may be exempt from this provision, check with the media specialist or the subscription database (e.g. United Streaming).

Off-air recordings may be used once by individual teachers in the course of instructional activities and repeated once only when reinforcement is necessary within a building during the first 10 consecutive school days, excluding scheduled interruptions in the 45 calendar day retention period. Off-air recordings may be made only at the request of, and used by, individual teachers and may not be regularly recorded in anticipation of requests. No broadcast 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. A limited number of copies may be reproduced from each off-air recording to meet the legitimate needs of teachers. Each additional copy shall be subject to all provisions governing the original recording.

After the first 10 consecutive school days, off-air recordings may be used up to the end of the 45 day retention period only for evaluation purposes (i.e. to determine whether or not to include the broadcast program in the teaching curriculum). Permission must be secured from the publisher before the recording can be used for instructional purposes after the 10-day period.

Off-air recordings need not be used in their entirety, but the recorded programs may not be altered from their original content. Off-air recordings may not be physically or electronically combined or merged to constitute teaching anthologies or compilations. All copies of off-air recordings must include the copyright notice on the broadcast program as recorded.

AUTHORIZED REPRODUCTION AND USE OF COPYRIGHTED COMPUTER SOFTWARE
Schools have a valid need for high-quality software at reasonable prices. To ensure a fair return to the authors of software programs, the district shall support the legal and ethical issues involved in copyright laws and any usage agreements that are incorporated into the acquisition of software programs.

To this end, the following guidelines shall be in effect:

  1. All copyright laws and publisher license agreements between the vendor and the district shall be observed.
  2. Staff members shall take reasonable precautions to prevent copying or the use of unauthorized copies on school equipment.
  3. A back-up copy shall be purchased for use as a replacement when a program is lost or damaged. If the vendor is not able to supply a replacement, the district shall make a back-up copy that will be used for replacement purposes only.
  4. A copy of the software license agreement shall be retained by the Chief Technology Officer [or designee].
  5. A computer program may be adapted by adding to the content or changing the language. The adapted program may not be distributed.

FAIR USE GUIDELINES FOR EDUCATIONAL MULTIMEDIA
Students may incorporate portions of copyrighted materials in producing educational multi-media projects such as videos, Power Points, podcasts, and websites for a specific course and may perform, display, or retain the projects.

Educators may perform or display their own multi-media projects to students in support of curriculum-based instructional activities. These projects may be used:

  1. In face-to-face instruction
  2. In demonstrations and presentations, including conferences
  3. In assignments to students
  4. For remote instruction if distribution of the signal is limited
  5. Over a network that cannot prevent duplication for 15 days; after 15 days a copy may be saved onsite only
  6. In their personal portfolios

Educators may use copyrighted materials in a multi-media project for two years. After that, permission must be requested and received.

The following limitations restrict the portion of any given work that may be used pursuant of fair use in an educational multi-media project:

  1. Motion Media: Ten percent or three minutes, whichever is less.
  2. Text Materials: Ten percent or 1,000 words, whichever is less.
  3. Poetry: An entire poem of fewer than 250 words, but no more than three poems from one author or five poems from an anthology. For poems of greater than 250 words, excerpts of up to 250 words may be used, but no more than three excerpts from one poet or five excerpts from an anthology.
  4. Music, Lyrics, and Music Video: Up to 10% but no more than 30 seconds. No alterations that change the basic melody or fundamental character of the work.
  5. Illustrations, Cartoons, and Photographs: No more than five images by an artist and no more than 10% of 15 images, whichever is less from a collective work.
  6. Numerical Data Sets: Up to 10% or 2,500 field or cell entries, whichever is less.

Fair use does not include posting a student’s or teacher’s work on the internet if it includes portions of copyrighted materials. Permission to copy shall be obtained from the original copyright holder before such projects are placed online. The opening screen of such presentations shall include notice that permission was granted, and materials are restricted from further use.


Adopted: 7/07
Reviewed: 7/11; 9/12; 9/13; 2/15; 4/18; 6/21
Revised: 1/10; 2/24
Related Policy: 603.14
Legal Reference (Code of Iowa): 17 US Code § 101 et al; 281 IAC 12.3(12)
IASB Reference: 605.07-R(1)