copyright, education and librarians: understanding privileges and rights

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@UKCopyrightLit https ://copyrightliteracy.org CIILP Wales Conference 2017 Dr Jane Secker Senior Lecturer in Educational Development City, University of London @jsecker COPYRIGHT, EDUCATION AND LIBRARIANS: UNDERSTANDING PRIVILEGES AND RIGHTS

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Page 1: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

@UKCopyrightLit https://copyrightliteracy.org CIILP Wales Conference 2017

Dr Jane SeckerSenior Lecturer in Educational Development

City, University of London

@jsecker

COPYRIGHT,

EDUCATION AND

LIBRARIANS:

UNDERSTANDING PRIVILEGES AND RIGHTS

Page 2: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

• Copyright underpins

many library services

• Inter-library loan

• Copying for users

• Copyright impacts on

digitisation

preservation and

access to our

collections

WHY DOES

COPYRIGHT MATTER?

Page 3: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

• Librarians have special privileges under the law

• Section 40-44A of the CDPA in the UK

• Similar exceptions around the world

• Librarians negotiate and sign licences

• Librarians are important copyright educators

WHY DOES

COPYRIGHT MATTER?

Page 4: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

IT’S WHERE ACCESS TO

INFORMATION MEETS THE LAW

Page 5: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

SO WHY NOW?

Page 6: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

SO WHAT IS THE ISSUE?TECHNOLOGY

AND THE

INTERNET

Page 7: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

PIRACY,

INFRINGEMENT &

DIGITAL COPYING

Page 8: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

WHERE DOES THAT

LEAVE LIBRARIANS?

Page 9: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights
Page 11: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

PANIC AND FEAR

Page 12: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

BUT WHAT IS RESULT OF FEAR?

Page 13: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

RISK AVERSION

Page 14: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

RESPECT TO THE COPYRIGHT

GEEK

https://copyrightliteracy.org

Chris Morrison

University of Kent

Page 15: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

THE UK COPYRIGHT LITERACY

SURVEY

Survey was undertaken in 14 countries (Europe and world)

UK survey undertaken in December 2014

Responses from over 600 professionals

Page 16: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

OUR SURVEY SAID….

UK compared favourably to other

countries in terms of copyright literacy

57% of UK librarians moderately or

extremely confident about copyright

matters

76% thought having a copyright policy is important and 63%

have one

64% of institutions had a copyright

officer (higher in HE)

Copyright was a source of anxiety and professional

development needed

Page 17: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

UNDERSTANDING COPYRIGHT

EXPERIENCES

Gathering additional

qualitative data

Three group interviews with

academic librarians

Exploring variations in the way

copyright is experienced

Implications for copyright education

and institutional strategies

Page 18: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

PHENOMENOGRAPHY

• A qualitative research method from education

used increasingly in information literacy

research

• Based on Marton’s Variation theory as a way of

underpinning learning

• Asks open questions designed to ask what

people do not why

• Presents categories of description in an

outcome space

©

©

Page 19: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

COPYRIGHT AS AN EXPERIENCE

Category 4: Copyright is an opportunity for

negotiation, collaboration

and co-construction of understanding

Category 1: Copyright is a problem

Category 2: Copyright is complicated

and shifting

Category 3: Copyright is a known

entity requiring coherent messages

Page 20: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

CATEGORY 1 & 2

Category 1: Copyright is seen as a problem and avoided

Category 2: Copyright is seen as complicated and passed on to specialists

Page 21: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

CATEGORY 3 & 4

Category 3: Copyright is seen as a knowable entity requiring coherent messages

Category 4: Copyright is an opportunity for negotiation, collaboration and co-construction of understanding

Page 22: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

COPYRIGHT AS AN EXPERIENCE

Category 4: Copyright is an opportunity for

negotiation, collaboration

and co-construction of understanding

Category 1: Copyright is a problem

Category 2: Copyright is complicated

and shifting

Category 3: Copyright is a known

entity requiring coherent messages

Page 23: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

DIMENSIONS OF VARIATION

• The individual’s level of knowledge

• Status / grade of librarian

• Beliefs about the higher purpose of

libraries / librarians

• Their ideology towards the value and

purpose of copyright

• The audience

• The context of the interaction

Page 24: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

SO WHAT CAN WE DO?

Page 25: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

WHAT DO LIBRARIANS NEED?

More knowledge?

More skills?

Page 26: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

RETHINKING COPYRIGHT

EDUCATION FOR LIBRARIANS

Bridging the gap between a one

day course and a PG Diploma in copyright law

Focusing on what librarians need to know

about copyright

Focusing on their role as copyright

educators

Page 28: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

Copyright the Card game

downloaded over 2,500

times, international versions

in development

PLAYING WITH COPYRIGHT

https://copyrightliteracy.org/abo

ut-2/copyright-the-card-game/

The Publishing TrapUS version of copyright card game

Copyright the Card Game NAG 2016

Page 29: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

THE INTERNATIONAL

COMMUNITY

August 2017 – IFLA Models for

Copyright Education in

Information Literacy Programs

Page 30: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

IN CONCLUSION

Copyright is important to

librarians because of technology and

the internet

Our research shows that it

creates fear and fear leads to risk

aversion

Copyright literacy is not more

knowledge about copyright, it’s a new attitude and

approach and about how you teach others

We have resources to help and want to create

more support to empower librarians

Page 31: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

FURTHER READING

Morrison, C and Secker J. (2015) Copyright Literacy in the UK: a survey of librarians and other cultural heritage sector professionals. Library and Information Research. 39 (121)http://www.lirgjournal.org.uk/lir/ojs/index.php/lir/article/view/675

Morrison, C and Secker, J (2016) Exceptions for libraries. Copyrightuser.org. Available online.

Morrison, C and Secker, J. (2016) A Guide to Copyright. Association of University Administrators.

Rios-Amaya, Juliana, Secker, Jane and Morrison, Chris (2016) Lecture recording in higher education: risky business or evolving open practice. LSE / University of Kent, London, UK. http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/68275/

Secker, J and Morrison, C. (2016) Copyright and E-learning: a guide for practitioners. Facet publishing: London. Chapter 6: Copyright education and training available online.

Todorova, T., Trencheva, T., Kurbanoğlu, S., Dogan G., & Horvat, A. (2014) A Multinational Study on Copyright Literacy Competencies of LIS Professionals. Presentation given at 2nd European Conference on Information Literacy (ECIL) held in Dubrovnik. October 2014. Retrieved March 13, 2015 from http://ecil2014.ilconf.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/Todorova.pdf

https://copyrightliteracy.org @UKCopyrightLit

Page 32: Copyright, Education and Librarians: understanding privileges and rights

IMAGE CREDITS

Slide 1: Copyright Sewer by Alan Levine on Flickr: https://flic.kr/p/bmnwzW CC-BY

Slide 2, 3 & 23: Helga by Jane Secker CC-BY-SA

Slide 4: ‘Path path path’ by Hockadilly of Flickr: https://flic.kr/p/9KCGGb Used with permission

Slide 5: Hadrian’s library at Ephesus by Monceau https://flic.kr/p/qM3MTN CC-BY-SA

Slide 6: A Vernacular of File Formats, Rosa Menkman at Born Digital, Moti, Breda https://flic.kr/p/q8uAtD CC-BY

Slide 7: Photo from Unsplash.com CC-0

Slide 8: : If you are not confused by Brian Talbot https://flic.kr/p/frJ48 CC-BY-NC

Slide 10: Panic by Nate Stelner https://flic.kr/p/us2aa Public Domain

Slide 11: : Peter pursuant licensed under CC-BY

Slide 12: Rural laissez-faire by Bosc d’Anjou https://flic.kr/p/aopVVo CC-BY

Slide 25: Logos from CILIP and Information Literacy Group

Slide 26, 27, & 28 by Jane Secker / Chris Morrison licensed under CC-BY. Logos copyright of IFLA, ECIL and LILAC