Our guidance at eCampusOntario would be to include the following statement:

 

“This resource is licensed XXX unless otherwise noted”

 

We would then have the author include a copyright statement with the material used under fair dealing “(Title) by (Author). Copyright (Copyright Holder) (Year). All Rights Reserved”

 

We would also encourage the creation of an appendix with a list of materials that are exceptions to the CC license.

 

Meredith Jacob and a team of colleagues at Creative Commons USA are currently working on a best practices for Fair Use/Dealing in OER. We invited her to give a talk third party materials in OER over the spring… the recording is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?list=PLZbPHTwqAgUqbalbV-v55eASl1ec0vsra&v=sT9Sla5Qnsg

 

Lillian

 

// Lillian Hogendoorn, M.I. (she/her)
Acting Manager, Digital Access and OER

eCampusOntario

647-202-8553
eCampusOntario
372 Bay St. 14th Floor
Toronto, ON, M5H 2W9
ecampusontario.ca

 

 

 

From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces@lists.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Nick Baker <nbaker@uwindsor.ca>
Date: Thursday, November 26, 2020 at 2:10 PM
To: Jessica Norman <jessica.norman@sait.ca>, "Alberta OER Community of Practice (albertaoer@googlegroups.com)" <albertaoer@googlegroups.com>, "BCcampus OER Listserv (canadaoer@lists.bccampus.ca)" <canadaoer@lists.bccampus.ca>, "SPARC Libraries & OER Forum (liboer@sparcopen.org)" <liboer@sparcopen.org>
Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] Fair use statement in OER example?

 

EXTERNAL EMAIL ALERT: This email originated from outside of the organization. Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe.

 

Hi all, 

 

I was literally just having this conversation with 200 education students this morning who are learning how to create OERs...this is not something I've broached yet (simpler to get them to mix like with like so far!) but if anyone has an example of a statement like this, I'd love to see it, too! 

 

Cheers

 

Nick 

 

Prof. Nick Baker
Director
Office of Open Learning
Room CEI-2241

Ed Lumley Centre for Engineering Innovation (entrance at 700 California Ave)

University of Windsor, 401 Sunset Ave.
Windsor, Ontario, N9B 3P4
Message me on Teams

(519) 253-3000 ext. 4925
www.uwindsor.ca/openlearning

Twitter: @nbaker

The University of Windsor is built on the traditional territory of the Three Fires Confederacy of First Nations, which includes the Ojibwa, the Odawa, and the Potawatomie. As a settler here, I acknowledge and thank the traditional custodians of the land for their wisdom and connection to this place. 


From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces@lists.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Jessica Norman <jessica.norman@sait.ca>
Sent: November 26, 2020 1:51 PM
To: Alberta OER Community of Practice (albertaoer@googlegroups.com) <albertaoer@googlegroups.com>; BCcampus OER Listserv (canadaoer@lists.bccampus.ca) <canadaoer@lists.bccampus.ca>; SPARC Libraries & OER Forum (liboer@sparcopen.org) <liboer@sparcopen.org>
Subject: [Canadaoer] Fair use statement in OER example?

 

<This message has been cross-posted.  Apologies for any duplicate messages.>

 

Hi All,

I’m looking for a real-world example of an OER that includes material under Fair Use or Fair Dealing and has a well-written statement to express that the material is open licensed with the exception of the copyrighted portion.  I know I’ve seen them in the past but I didn’t save the links and can’t find them now.    Suggestions are greatly appreciated!

 

Cheers,

Jessica

 

 

 

Jessica Norman, MLS

Open Educational Resources Librarian

Reg Erhardt Library

Liaison to: Construction, Manufacturing & Automation

SAFA Table Office, Division IV

(She/Her)

Book an appointment

 

Southern Alberta Institute of Technology

Stand Grad Building, MC113

(Office) 403.210.4073

jessica.norman@sait.ca

 

 

The Southern Alberta Institute of Technology (SAIT) acknowledges it is situated on

the traditional territories of the Blackfoot Confederacy, which today encompasses

the Indigenous people of the Treaty 7 region: the Siksika, the Piikani, the Kainai,

the Tsuut’ina, the Stoney Nakoda, and the homeland of the Northwest Métis.

SAIT also recognizes all Peoples who make their homes in the Treaty 7 region of southern Alberta.