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How to find free images and other resources without copyright restrictions

Challenge to Learn

Creative common (CC) and GNU licenses. Creative Commons is an organization which supports free and open content. A Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 It has a nice feature to embed the attribute into the images. But that is for non-commercial usage only. International License. Xpert attribution.

Images 0
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The Secret to Beating the Forgetting Curve

CourseArc

Doesn’t being exposed to a new fact or a new method automatically embed it in our memory, where we can retrieve it later at will? Image of hourglass by Alexander Boden via Flickr Creative Commons License. As it turns out, the answer is a decisive “no,” because that’s not how human brains are wired.

Lesson 160
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Empowering students with digital tools and project-based learning

Kadenze

The underpinning pedagogy of these courses marks a distinctive and significant contribution to the field of creative education. Kadenze is proud to bring this course to students and creative educators across the globe. Credit for Image: University of Michigan Health Lab published under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0

Project 52
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Yesterday's blog post

Learning with e's

We can debate the ethics of changing a blog post once it has been posted, and yes, there are those who take content under Creative Commons licensing and repurpose it, translate it, embed it. You can remove the nail, but the hole remains (sometimes in your reputation). There's little that can be done about that. Unported License.

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Giving it all away

Learning with e's

Some also embed my slideshows into their own websites and blogs, which disseminates my ideas even further afield. Increasingly, due to the good offices of Creative Commons, much of the content on the web can be legally repurposed or appropriated for other use. I couldn't pay for that kind of distribution. open scholarship.

OER 88
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Looking both ways

Learning with e's

It looks much better, I argue, if students embed these ideas as paraphrased statements into their commentary. Photo by Raddaquii Looking both ways by Steve Wheeler is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 It takes more energy to do this, but it looks a lot more cohesive. Look both ways.

Theory 81
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The interview

Learning with e's

The interview in full is available by clicking here (sorry, the embed function isn''t working for this one). Graphic courtesy of Bonnie Stachowiack The interview by Steve Wheeler is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 We also tackled the thorny issue of privacy in the digital age.