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Can I Use that Picture?

Can I Use that Picture?

How to get and use free images the RIGHT way in class Images can bring presentations, reports and other student work to life. Students should learn to use images responsibly. Here’s what you need to know to help them. Creating posters has been a staple of so many classrooms of different ages. Many teachers will round up old magazines, too, letting students cut and attach images that illustrate their topics. The digital age has opened classrooms up to a figurative stack of magazines that’s virtually unlimited, searchable and easily usable. I’m talking about Creative Commons images. Copyright vs. If students are looking for photos and don’t have any training on where to find them, where do they often turn? The problem: a standard Google Images search returns lots of copyright-protected images. The solution: Use Creative Commons photos with proper attribution. Here’s a rough analogy I use to explain the difference between copyrighted images and Creative Commons images when I present to teachers: Sources of Creative Commons images Related Crash!

Public domain image resources Public domain image resources is a copy of the master Wikipedia page at Meta, which lists a number of sources of public domain images on the Web. Public Domain images should be marked with the Public Domain Mark 1.0. Public Domain Mark enables works that are no longer restricted by copyright to be marked as such in a standard and simple way, making them easily discoverable and available to others. The Public Domain Mark is recommended for works that are free of known copyright around the world. Please read the policy on image use and etiquette at: Wikipedia:Image use policy. See also: General Collections[edit] Public Domain resources should have either the Public Domain Mark 1.0 or the CC0 1.0 Universal (CC0 1.0) Public Domain Dedication mark visible. Snappygoat.com – 13,990,108 Free Public Domain/CC0 Images from multiple sources. US Government resources[edit] Subject-based Collections[edit] Ordered by subject, alphabetically: Art[edit] Automotive[edit] The Crittenden Automotive Library.

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