For this week's prompt, I found myself doing a lot more research on copyright law than I really expected was ever necessary. In the end, I think that what most spoke to me was the Fair(y) Use Tale and Fair Use School videos on what copyright law /does/ allow you to do. Thus for this week's video critique, I will be looking at Day at School, which I found to be cute, but unhelpful. As works go, it was a fun video to watch, and called back to the advertisements of the 1950s, however I found it to be what I would expect for a great contest entry, but not a great informative resource. Disregarding aspects that I just didn't like (I feel like they picked several of the worst aspects of the 50s to model while leaving out other things that reduced the effect of resemblance) in this video they inform you of three things which you can't so and alternatives for what you can do in place of those. These three points were good to address because they're the most common things that educators think are okay, but this really didn't paint a whole picture about what actually can be done. After watching that video first, I was left with the impression that copyright law is extremely restrictive. It seemed like the only things that an educator is allowed to do is show something they've already bought which is directly related to the curriculum, use only /very/ limited clips, or outright make their own content.
Something I found much more helpful however, was http://www.educationworld.com/a_curr/curr280.shtml which talks about what can and can't be done. Their link to the five major topics provided for easy navigation to important topics such as where the line between stealing and fair use for educators is, the cans and can'ts of fair use and copyright, and how the matter gets complicated by newer technologies. In fact it was in the new technologies section where I found evidence that my use of a song by Kevin McLeod would have likely been okay even if I hadn't found it at a royalty free site with a creative commons attribution license. On a more critical note however, the education world website is... cluttered. White space might not be bad, but they have wasted space on either margin of their site which they could really have moved their content into to give it more room. The navigation bar on the left is a reasonable size, but on the right column is a couple of unrelated tools that take up way too much room given that it's not the primary focus of the website. This page's actual purpose is the article itself and the tool column on the right is almost the same size as the actual article. Worse, the tool column is only one page deep while the article itself extends several pages down into where it is an isolated bit of text with more space /not/ being used than the article itself takes up. This makes their site look unprofessional and like it doesn't actually have useful and important information which can be very unfortunate because they really do.
Hi Chad,
ReplyDeleteI think it's great that you decided to write about the clip you found the least helpful. It's always great to show the sources you did enjoy but it's helpful to know which sources to we should be more wary of. I agree with you that the Day At School video was not as helpful. I felt that their use of creativity was great but it got in the way of trying to explain copyright. Considering your explanation of the video, I think that it might be beneficial for some who might be familiar with the concept of fair use but don't know the specifics of using material appropriately. This is an area that I am very cautious and clueless about so this video might be worth checking out now!
Hi Chad - Thanks for really comparing and contrasting the pieces that you looked at. It's always helpful to know what others found helpful! I just watched the Fair(y) Use video after seeing that you and Jee Yeon had mentioned it, and I actually found it hard to watch. As much as I love Disney, I was bored by the half-way mark and found a lot of what they were saying to be contrived from their limitations of using Disney clips to explain the entire idea of copyrights. And yes, it did seem that a lot of the videos really make the process seem restrictive and immovable. The sites geared toward educators painted a much broader use of copyrighted materials and would probably be the most helpful for someone looking for specific information on copyright use.
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