This link has been bookmarked by 58 people . It was first bookmarked on 10 Mar 2006, by Rsavi.
-
08 Jul 14
Ouida Myers"Creative Commons in K-12 Education
By Wesley A. Fryer
www.speedofcreativity.org
" -
13 Apr 14
-
03 Mar 14
-
07 Dec 12
-
26 Sep 12
-
Students often exhibit extremely high levels of intrinsic motivation when they are challenged and enabled to create digital stories as classroom assignments. Learn and let your students know about Creative Commons, as well as the CC-friendly search sites it links to, to empower everyone to legally create high quality digital stories that can be safely shared with a global audience
-
-
05 Jun 12
-
17 Feb 12
-
05 Feb 12
Anissa MadrillTools for the TEKS - integrating technology in the classroom.
-
13 Sep 11
Karina Bolgercopyright source
list of sites for music, pictures, etc ok for use in teaching -
19 Jul 11
-
08 Jul 11
david moellerIs it legal for me to use this picture in my slideshow presentation? What if we put it on the Internet, is it still legal? What about including music in my digital story? What can we do legally at school, and what can students legally do at home when they are not working on an assignment for class?
-
07 Jul 11
-
08 May 11
-
04 May 11
-
01 Apr 11
-
14 Feb 11
-
11 Feb 11
-
19 Jan 11
-
14 Jan 11
-
11 Jan 11
Needle Nethttp://www.wtvi.com/teks/05_06_articles/creative-commons.html
copyright Creative_Commons toolbox creative technology commons audio images
-
14 Dec 10
-
27 Jul 10
-
26 Jul 10
-
All of our students should be engaged in the process of writing and telling digital stories with technology tools available in their classrooms. If teachers can obtain a microphone for their classroom computer (or purchase one for $9 at Wal-Mart) their students can create podcasts using free software tools like Audacity and Garageband, or digital stories using photos with free software like iPhoto, iMovie, and PhotoStory, or free websites like BubbleShare.
-
-
23 Jul 10
-
14 Jun 10
-
02 Jun 10
-
03 Feb 10
Meg Stoffel"Tools for the TEKS: Integrating Technology in the Classroom - Creative Commons in the K-12 Classroom."
-
11 Nov 09
-
s a nonprofit organization that offers flexible copyright licenses for creative works.” Everyone involved in education should be familiar with Creative Commons both as content consumers and content producers, wanting to legally access and use digital content. Whether someone is creating a digital story with PhotoStory3, an enhanced podcast with Garageband3, a PowerPoint presentation, or a narrated online slideshow with BubbleShare (http://bubbleshare.com), Creative Commons licenses and website search tools can provide clear guidance about acceptable and legal uses of digital content to create and share “derivative works” using these materials. These digital resources can include images, music audio files, movies, or any other type of media.
-
LICKR AND CREATIVE COMMONS
The Flickr Creative Commons search page (www.flickr.com/creativecommons/) is a wonderful resource for students as well as teachers to use when searching for online images to legally reuse in a multimedia presentation. Flickr users can search by license, depending on their planned use of located images. At the time of this writing, over 800,000 images were available in the “attribution-only” licensing section of Flickr Creative Commons alone.
-
Students as well as teachers need to learn about intellectual property (IP) issue
-
-
31 Aug 09
-
26 Jun 09
-
05 Dec 08
-
01 Dec 08
-
24 Nov 08
-
12 Aug 08
-
24 Jul 08
-
02 Jul 08
-
26 Jun 08
Kathy RiceCreative Commons in K-12 Education
-
25 Jun 08
Sheryl A. McCoyThis website is maintained for educators interested in the effective use of technology in the classroom. An accompanying column to this website is published in the TechEdge, the Technology and Education Newsletter of the Texas Computer Education Association.
-
Adam BriceThis website is maintained for educators interested in the effective use of technology in the classroom. An accompanying column to this website is published in the TechEdge, the Technology and Education Newsletter of the Texas Computer Education Association. "><META NAME="KEYWORDS" CONTENT="education, technology, educational technology, TAAS, TEKS, Texas, school, internet, classroom, software"><META NAME="Author" CONTENT="Wesley A. Fryer (www.wtvi.com/wesley)"><META NAME="Publisher" CONTENT="WesTech Vision Inc. (www.wtvi.com)"><META NAME="Publisher-Email" CONTENT="info@wtvi.com
-
27 Apr 08
-
17 Dec 07
-
21 Sep 07
craig rolandEveryone involved in education should be familiar with Creative Commons.
-
15 Sep 06
-
18 Aug 06
-
09 Jun 06
-
10 Mar 06
-
02 Mar 06
Tama LeaverStudents often exhibit extremely high levels of intrinsic motivation when they are challenged and enabled to create digital stories as classroom assignments. Learn and let your students know about Creative Commons, as well as the CC-friendly search sites
Would you like to comment?
Join Diigo for a free account, or sign in if you are already a member.