additional resources on podcasting

About
Podcasting in Education
- Educause, an association of educators that seeks to advance higher
education by promoting the intelligent use of information technology,
has resources about podcasting in higher education including their
brief, “Seven
Things You Should Know About Podcasting.”
- Stanford
on iTunes. Stanford University has made a number of campus
events, including concerts and lectures available to the public
as podcasts. Linking to this site allows you to enter the Stanford
area of Apple’s iTunes Music Store if you have iTunes installed
on your computer.
- Duke University’s Digital Initiative site features a summary
report on their freshman
iPod distribution program and descriptions of courses utilizing
podcasting and iPods.
- Purdue University began offering a number of its lectures as “Boilercasts” available
to the general public in the fall of 2005.
- University of Missouri released a white
paper on Podcasting and Vodcasting which explains the technology
and discusses implications for its use in higher education.
- Elliot Masie’s Podcast on How to Podcast. Masie,
an international expert on e-learning, has created a podcast about
how to podcast which includes how to incorporate phone interviews.
- DoIT’s Academic Technology ePedagogy series featured a
presentation on podcasting on October 21, 2005. Richard Hoops of
the Aquatic Life Sciences Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison
talks about the EarthWatch radio program which is now available
as a podcast. Alan Wolf of the DoIT discusses tools and resources
for creating and receiving podcasts.
- Learning Circuits, an online resource offered by the American
Society for Training and Development featured an article, “Podcasting
in Academic and Corporate Learning” by Eva Kaplan-Leiserson
that offers some valuable insights into implications of podcasting
for learning.
Using copyrighted materials in podcasts
Instructors who receive an Adaptation award for podcasting will
be utilizing an area of the Apple iTunes Music Store to deliver podcast
files to students. Students will access the files in the iTunes
Music Store via a link from the course Learn@UW site. Logging
into Learn@UW involves an authentication step that will limit access
to registered students. Once they access them, students can
download the podcasted files.
If your podcast contains content that should not circulate beyond
registered students, such as copyrighted material created by others,
you should explain to students that these downloaded files should
not be shared with others outside the course.
In addition, if you are considering inclusion of copyrighted audio
works by others in your podcast, you should:
- seek permission from the owner(s) of the work(s) or
- determine if the use of the work(s) you are planning
fits the following four criteria for educational "fair use:”
- The purpose and character of the use, including whether
such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit
educational purposes;
- The nature of the copyrighted work;
- The amount and substantiality of the portion used in
relation to the copyrighted work as a whole; and
- The effect of the use upon the potential market value
of the copyrighted work
The following resources provide more detailed explanations and information
about fair use of copyrighted materials:
- The United
States Copyright Office
- The University of Minnesota’s Copyright Information and
Education site, which includes an online “Copyright
Decision Map” and a “Fair Use Analysis Tool” that
can help you make more informed decisions.
- Bound By Law?
(Tales from the Public Domain)
Scholars at the Duke Center for the Study of the Public Domain have created
a highly readable comic book that covers many issues involved in fair use.
Updated: February 21st, 2007
Copyrighting your podcasts
Thinking about copyrighting your podcast? You may want to license
it through the United States Copyright Office or the Creative Commons
organization.
- The United
States Copyright Office, offers information about provisions
of US copyright laws and serves as a registry for licensing
copyrights for individual works.
- The Creative
Commons is a nonprofit group that offers licenses that
protect the rights of the owner of original works while encouraging
some uses of them by others
Music and other audio for podcasts
A short musical signature at the beginning and end of your podcast
adds interest and helps your students recognize your podcast. However,
using excerpts of copyrighted music in this way might not be considered
fair use since it might not be deemed essential to the instructional
purpose of the podcast. If you want to include music for this purpose
in your podcast, consider the sources below.
The resources listed may also have audio files of historical speeches
and proceedings that may be relevant to the instructional purpose
of your podcast.
- Some of the music and other sound files displayed online in
the Library of Congress’ American
Memories collection are copyright-free. Please see
the general
guidelines the US Copyright Office has provided about use
of materials at the Library of Congress.
- The Creative
Commons group hosts collections of audio materials. Some
of these, which include music, sounds, and Supreme Court proceedings,
are licensed under the Attribution-Share Alike license, which
allows many types of reuse, as long as the original artist
is attributed.
- Create your own music (or have a student create it) using music
recording software like Sony Acid Music Studio for Windows or
Apple’s GarageBand for Macintosh, both available from the DoIT
Tech Store.