Holdenpptvoice
description
Transcript of Holdenpptvoice
What this presentation will cover
Fair Use for educational multimedia How to cite online multimedia How to seek permissions
Fair Use Guidelines
American Distance Education Consortium
Fair Use Limitations
1. Time
2. Portion
3. Copying
4. Distribution
Limitations
Motion Media 10% or 3 minutes
Text 10% or 1000 words
Music, Lyrics, Music Video 10% or 30 seconds
Photos and Illustrations 5 images? Questionable
Other requirements
Copying and distribution limitations Attribution and acknowledgement Notice of use restrictions Future uses
Fair Use Guidelines
American Distance Education Consortium
http://www.adec.edu/admin/papers/fair10-17.html
How to cite multimedia
Guidelines from the Library of Congress
Modern Language Association Format
The following format examples are taken from The Library of Congress’ Learning Page.
“The Learning Page – Getting Started: Cite Sources.” Library of Congress. 8 August 2006. U.S. Govt. 21 February 2007 <http://memory.loc.gov/learn/start/cite/index.html>
Citing an entire website
MLA format for a website
1. Site’s title in italics.
2. Editor’s firstname, MI, last name.
3. Publication information if available.
4. Name of sponsoring organization.
5. Date of access and URL
Example:Library of Congress. U.S. Govt. 20 February 2007 <http://www.loc.gov>
Citing cartoons and illustrations
MLA format for illustrations
1. Artist’s lastname, first and middle initial2. Title of work in quotation marks3. Format (cartoon or illustration)4. Title in italics5. Publishing information (book, magazine, etc)6. Title of online collection in italics7. Editor of collection if available8. Date of posting if available9. Name of project in italics10. Name of sponsoring organization11. Date of access and URL
MLA example for an illustration
Franklin, Benjamin. “Join or Die.” Illustration. The Pennsylvania Gazette 9 May 1754. Prints and Photographs Online Catalog. 2 Dec. 2005. American Memory. Library of Congress.
20 February 2007 <http://memory.loc.gov/pp/pphome.html>
Citing film
To view the short film, “Krazy Kat, bugologist”, click on the URL below.
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/oahtml/animatTitles01.html
Then click on the link to “Krazy Kat, bugologist.”Options to view in RealMedia, MPEG and Quicktime
MLA format for film
1. Film title in italics
2. Directors first name, middle initial and last name.
3. Names of writers, performers, producers.
4. Name of distributor.
5. Year of release
6. Title of online collection in italics
7. Date of collection’s posting or recent update
8. Name of project in italics
9. Name of sponsoring institution
10. Date of access and URL
MLA example for a film
Krazy Kat, bugologist. Writer George Herriman. Animator Leon Searl. Piano composer and performer Philip Carli. International Film Service 1916. Origins of American Animation, 1900-1921. 31 March 1999. American Memory. Library of Congress. 20 February 2007. <http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/oahtml/oahome.html>
Citing Photographs
MLA format for photographs
1. Photographer’s lastname, firstname, MI2. Title of photograph in italics3. Original date4. Title of collection5. Date of posting for collection6. Current location of original print7. Name of project in italics8. Sponsoring organization9. Date of access and URL
MLA example for a photograph
O’Sullivan, Timothy H. Incidents of the War. A Harvest of Death. C1865. Selected Civil War Photographs from the Library of Congress, 1861-1865. 15 Jan. 2000. American Memory. Library of Congress. 20 Feb. 2007 <http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/cwphtml/cwpcam/cwcam2c.html>
Citing Sound Recordings
To listen to an audio recording of the song,
“Coming Round the Mountain”, click on the link:http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/afccchtml/cowhome.html
Next, enter a Keyword Search for “coming round the mountain”
Click on the first hit, the title “Coming Round the Mountain”
Listen to the recording in MP3, Real Audio or wav format
MLA format for audio & music
1. Composer, conductor or performer last name, first name, MI. (Depends on emphasis). If given, second performer is listed by firstname, MI, lastname.
2. Title of recording in italics3. Title of performer if not stated in #1 above4. Date of performance5. Name of medium (LP, CD, etc)6. Title of recording company and year of issue7. Title of online collection in italics8. Editor or compiler of collection9. Date of posting of collection10. Name of project in italics11. Name of sponsoring organization12. Date of access and URL
MLA example for a recording
Scott, Mrs. Ben and Myrtle B. Wilkinson. Coming Round the Mountain. 31 Oct. 1939. 78 rpm. Sydney Robertson Cowell, n.d. California Gold: Northern California Folk Music from the Thirties. 19 Oct. 1998. American Memory. Lib. of Congress. 20 Feb. 2007 <http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/afccchtml/cowhome.html>
MLA Adapted Style- Radio & TV
The following example of citations for radio and television styles is an adapted format from the libraries of the University of California at Berkeley.
See the URL at:
http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/MRC/mla.html
MLA format for Television and Radio Programs1. Title of Program in italics
2. Series in parentheses and in italics
3. Writer, producer, director or performer first name, MI, last name. (The list’s order depends on emphasis)
4. Network.
5. Local affiliate and city.
6. Date of broadcast.
7. Name of sponsoring organization.
8. URL and date of access.
MLA Example for a TV/Radio show
The Art of Hip-Hop (Soundcheck). John Schaefer (Host) and Jeff Chang (Interview). NPR. WNYC, New York City, 12 Feb. 2007. http://www.wnyc.org/shows/soundcheck/episodes/2007/02/12. 20 Feb. 2007.
Seeking Permissions
Always a good idea!
Photographs and images are particularly important.
Template letter at http://www.landmark-project.com/permission_student.php