2. "Teachers, instructors, professors, and staff members in
non-profit educational institutions may communicate and
reproduce, in paper or electronic form, short excerpts from
a copyright-protected work for the purposes of research,
private study, criticism, review, news reporting, education,
satire, and parody." You can share a short excerpt: 10% can be shared.
3. "Copying or communicating multiple short excerpts from
the same copyright-protected work with the intention of
copying or communicating substantially the entire work is
prohibited."
4. Yes, a fee can be charged when another's protected copyrighted material is used.
5. It depends on how the teacher is to use that certain copyrighted material... But, yes, they can for educational purposes - if it is used appropriately.
6. "Teachers and students can copy and communicate the text of federal, provincial, and territorial statutes, regulations, and judicial decisions for educational purposes from every province and territory except Manitoba, Quebec, and Nunavut."
7. "Yes, you can play sound recordings and turn on televisions and radios in the classroom, subject to all of the following conditions: • it must take place on the premises of an educational institution; • it must be for educational or training purposes; • it must not be for profit; • it must take place before an audience consisting primarily of students of the educational institution, persons acting under its authority, or any person who is directly responsible for setting a curriculum for the educational institution; and • it must not involve a “motive of gain.“"
8. Yes, students may perform plays/other performances with the use of copyrighted material. For drama classes, etc.
9. "No. Copying an entire musical score that is not in a copyrightprotected work containing other musical scores is not permitted."
10. Up to 10% of music may be copied under fair dealing. "The Copyright Act permits the public performance of music in schools when it is “in furtherance of an educational object.”"
11. "A person acting under the authority of a non-profit educational institution can: • perform a musical work live if the performance is primarily by students of the educational institution; • play sound recordings containing a musical work; and • play radio and television programs containing a musical work while the program is being transmitted (over-the-air broadcast, cable, satellite, or over the Internet). The following conditions apply. The performance must: • take place on the premises of an educational institution; • be for educational or training purposes; • not be for profit; and • take place before an audience consisting primarily of students of the educational institution, persons acting under its authority, or any person who is directly responsible for setting a curriculum for the educational institution."
12. "The following uses of live and recorded music are not permitted by the Copyright Act and therefore require permission and payment: • at school dances; • at school sporting events; • while people are on hold when they telephone the school; • at an event where the admission fee is intended to make a profit; and • on school premises for no other reason than as background music (e.g., in the classroom, cafeteria, halls, over the PA system, at school events such as fairs, carnivals, sociocultural events)."
13. Yes, they can make a single copy of these items to use.
14. An owner of a legit copy of a computer program copy can, yes.
15. There are many rules when it comes to copying off the internet that apply to both teachers and students. But over-all, yes, they may copy/download items off of the internet.
16. Any original work created by a student in school is copyright-protected. I feel that this is really important.
4. Yes, a fee can be charged when another's protected copyrighted material is used.
5. It depends on how the teacher is to use that certain copyrighted material... But, yes, they can for educational purposes - if it is used appropriately.
6. "Teachers and students can copy and communicate the text of federal, provincial, and territorial statutes, regulations, and judicial decisions for educational purposes from every province and territory except Manitoba, Quebec, and Nunavut."
7. "Yes, you can play sound recordings and turn on televisions and radios in the classroom, subject to all of the following conditions: • it must take place on the premises of an educational institution; • it must be for educational or training purposes; • it must not be for profit; • it must take place before an audience consisting primarily of students of the educational institution, persons acting under its authority, or any person who is directly responsible for setting a curriculum for the educational institution; and • it must not involve a “motive of gain.“"
8. Yes, students may perform plays/other performances with the use of copyrighted material. For drama classes, etc.
9. "No. Copying an entire musical score that is not in a copyrightprotected work containing other musical scores is not permitted."
10. Up to 10% of music may be copied under fair dealing. "The Copyright Act permits the public performance of music in schools when it is “in furtherance of an educational object.”"
11. "A person acting under the authority of a non-profit educational institution can: • perform a musical work live if the performance is primarily by students of the educational institution; • play sound recordings containing a musical work; and • play radio and television programs containing a musical work while the program is being transmitted (over-the-air broadcast, cable, satellite, or over the Internet). The following conditions apply. The performance must: • take place on the premises of an educational institution; • be for educational or training purposes; • not be for profit; and • take place before an audience consisting primarily of students of the educational institution, persons acting under its authority, or any person who is directly responsible for setting a curriculum for the educational institution."
12. "The following uses of live and recorded music are not permitted by the Copyright Act and therefore require permission and payment: • at school dances; • at school sporting events; • while people are on hold when they telephone the school; • at an event where the admission fee is intended to make a profit; and • on school premises for no other reason than as background music (e.g., in the classroom, cafeteria, halls, over the PA system, at school events such as fairs, carnivals, sociocultural events)."
13. Yes, they can make a single copy of these items to use.
14. An owner of a legit copy of a computer program copy can, yes.
15. There are many rules when it comes to copying off the internet that apply to both teachers and students. But over-all, yes, they may copy/download items off of the internet.
16. Any original work created by a student in school is copyright-protected. I feel that this is really important.
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