IJLM
FORMULATIONS & FINDINGS
How Media Literacy Educators Reclaimed Copyright and Fair Use
Hobbs, Jaszi, & Aufderheide / Copyright and Fair Use 33
Renee Hobbs
Department of Broadcasting, Telecommunica-
tions, and Mass Media
Temple University
reneeh@temple.edu
Peter Jaszi
Professor of Law
Washington College of Law
American University
pjaszi@wcl.american.edu
Patricia Aufderheide
Professor of Communication
American University
paufder@american.edu
Keywords
fair use
copyright
digital media
communication
education
media literacy
law
policy
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doi: 10.1162/ijlm_a_00026
© 2009 Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Published under Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No
Derivative Works 3.0 Unported license
Volume 1, Number 3
Abstract
Media literacy educators make active use of copy-
righted works in the practice of teaching and
learning. They frequently use popular culture,
mass media, digital media, or other artifacts that
are not traditionally defined as “educational
media.” In part because of several well-publicized
cases in which severe penalties have been di-
rected at individuals involved in file-sharing and
because of the rise of licensed online multimedia
products marketed directly to schools, a climate
of fear about potential liability concerning the
unlicensed use of copyrighted materials in edu-
cation has been increasing among educators in
higher education and K-12 schools. In response,
media literacy educators in the United States are
asserting their fair use rights. This paper describes
the development of the Code of Best Practices in
Fair Use for Media Literacy Education , which was
created to articulate the consensus that exists
among educators about the application of fair use
to the practice of media literacy education. This
code was developed through two research meth-
ods: interviews with 60 educators; and intensive
four-hour focus groups with 150 K-12, university,
and youth media educators in ten cities across
the United States.The Code of Best Practices in
Fair Use for Media Literacy Education identifies five
principles that guide educators’ decisionmaking
about the application of fair use in education,
including the use of copyrighted materials in
teaching, the development and distribution of
curriculum materials, student use of copyrighted
materials in their own academic and creative
work, and dissemination of student work.