Classroom Performances and Displays
- The Law
- Face-to-Face Classroom Setting: Section 110 (1)
- In the Course of a Transmission: Section 110 (2) (TEACH Act)
- Other TEACH Resources
The Law
U.S. Copyright Law Section 110 (1, 2): Exemption of Certain Performances and Displays
Face-to-Face Classroom Setting: Section 110 (1)
Educators and students may perform or display a copyrighted work in the course of face-to-face teaching at a nonprofit educational institution in a classroom or other place normally devoted to instruction. There are no restrictions on the type or length of work and the copyright owner's permission is not necessary.
In the Course of a Transmission: Section 110 (2) (TEACH Act)
Section 110 (2) was recently revised by enactment of The Technology, Education, and Copyright Harmonization Act (TEACH) which was signed into law on November 2, 2002. TEACH allows the digital transmission of performances and displays of copyrighted works, without having to obtain prior permission from the copyright owner, as part of synchronous or asynchronous distance education applications if the following requirements are met:
WHO:
- Accredited, nonprofit educational institution
- Controlled by or under the actual supervision of the instructor
WHAT:
- Performances of nondramatic literary works or musical works
- Performances of reasonable portions of any other work, or
- Display of any other work in an amount comparable to that typically displayed in a live classroom setting
BUT NOT:
- Digital educational works (Works produced or marketed primarily for performance/display as part of mediated instructional activities transmitted via digital networks) or
- Unlawful copies (copies you know or reasonably should know were not lawfully made or acquired)
WHEN:
- As an integral part of a class session, and
- As part of systematic mediated instructional activities, and
- Directly related and of material assistance to the teaching content
HOW:
- Transmission made solely for and reception limited to (as technologically feasible) students enrolled in the course, and
- Technological measures that reasonably prevent:
- Retention in accessible form for a class session and
- Unauthorized further dissemination in accessible form, and
- No interference with copyright holder's technological measures that prevent such retention and dissemination
Converting Analog to Digital:
Converting analog to digital is permissible when
- No digital version available to the institution, or
- The available digital version is technologically protected to prevent TEACH uses
Institutional Requirements:
- Disseminate copyright policies
- Provide accurate information about copyright
- Promote copyright compliance
- Provide notice to students that course materials may be protected by copyright
Instructor Requirements:
Instructors who want to incorporate works into digital transmissions for instructional purposes applying TEACH should:
- Avoid use of commercial works that are sold or licensed for purposes of delivery of digital content for distance education purposes.
- Avoid use of pirated works, or works where you otherwise have reason to know the copy was not lawfully made.
- Generally, limit use of works to an amount and duration comparable to what would be displayed or performed in a physical classroom setting. In other words, TEACH does not authorize the digital transmission of textbooks or coursepacks to students.
- Supervise the digital performance or display, make it an integral part of a class session, and make it part of a systematic mediated instructional activity. In other words, the faculty should interactively use the copyrighted work as part of a class assignment in the distance education course. It should not be an entertainment add-on or passive background/optional reading.
- Use tools provided by the university to limit access to the works to students enrolled in the course, to prevent downstream copying by those students, and to prevent the students from retaining the works for longer than a "class session."
- Notify the students that the works may be subject to copyright protection and that they may not violate the legal rights of the copyright holder.
The TEACH Act Summary is a good tool to assure your compliance with TEACH.
Checklist for TEACH Act (
PDF)
Other TEACH Resources
- Teach Act Chart - Amended Section 110(2) by Laura Gasaway, The University of North Carolina
- The TEACH Act Finally Becomes Law, University of Texas, Office of General Counsel, Georgia Harper
- Distance Education and the TEACH Act, American Library Association
- CMC and the TEACH Act by Kenneth D. Crews, IUPUI, Copyright Management Center
- The TEACH Toolkit by Peggy Hoon, North Carolina State University