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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Evans, Brent J., Willinsky, John
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1036821
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author Evans, Brent J.
Willinsky, John
author_facet Evans, Brent J.
Willinsky, John
Evans, Brent J.
Willinsky, John
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Setting Aside the Course Reader: The Legal, Economic, and Pedagogical Reasons Evans, Brent J. Willinsky, John Reading Materials Educational Technology Higher Education Bibliographies Intellectual Property Copyrights Academic Libraries Library Services Court Litigation Educational Benefits In this article we examine the changing status of the course reader as an instructional technology in higher education. We assess the advantages of simply providing students bibliographic entries for assigned readings instead of readers, and we evaluate this alternative in regards to intellectual property and fair use issues focusing on "Cambridge University Press v. Becker" (2012). A study of 110 course readers showed that 45% of the readings are freely available either through the university library or open access sources. Finally, we review a number of pedagogical benefits to having students work directly with scholarship within a dynamically hyperlinked environment.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1036821
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2013
record_format eric
spellingShingle Setting Aside the Course Reader: The Legal, Economic, and Pedagogical Reasons
Evans, Brent J.
Willinsky, John
Reading Materials
Educational Technology
Higher Education
Bibliographies
Intellectual Property
Copyrights
Academic Libraries
Library Services
Court Litigation
Educational Benefits
Setting Aside the Course Reader: The Legal, Economic, and Pedagogical Reasons Evans, Brent J. Willinsky, John Reading Materials Educational Technology Higher Education Bibliographies Intellectual Property Copyrights Academic Libraries Library Services Court Litigation Educational Benefits In this article we examine the changing status of the course reader as an instructional technology in higher education. We assess the advantages of simply providing students bibliographic entries for assigned readings instead of readers, and we evaluate this alternative in regards to intellectual property and fair use issues focusing on "Cambridge University Press v. Becker" (2012). A study of 110 course readers showed that 45% of the readings are freely available either through the university library or open access sources. Finally, we review a number of pedagogical benefits to having students work directly with scholarship within a dynamically hyperlinked environment.
title Setting Aside the Course Reader: The Legal, Economic, and Pedagogical Reasons
topic Reading Materials
Educational Technology
Higher Education
Bibliographies
Intellectual Property
Copyrights
Academic Libraries
Library Services
Court Litigation
Educational Benefits
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1036821