Monday, 24 June 2024

Dissemination

Dissemination: Blog
☝๐Ÿ˜‰

Created by LEPL- Shuakhevi Municipality Village Baratauli named after Amiran Mamaladze Public Schoolhttps://read.bookcreator.com/CxFQ0vjArxf13O23epRWfwhGENS2/bk8FhKOnSqmnKkWQv47E0g

 

Logos

 Logos





eTwinning projects so far

 https://app.animaker.com/animo/0L7svnwdLkYjl5Lu/

TwinSpace Pages

  TwinSpace Pages


Home

https://school-education.ec.europa.eu/en/etwinning/projects/story-telling-national-myths-international-fiction/twinspace

1. Project Plan

https://school-education.ec.europa.eu/en/etwinning/projects/story-telling-national-myths-international-fiction/twinspace/pages/project-plan

2. Introduction

   2.1 Teachers' Profile

https://school-education.ec.europa.eu/en/etwinning/projects/story-telling-national-myths-international-fiction/twinspace/pages/teachers-profile

   2.2 Students' Profile

https://school-education.ec.europa.eu/en/etwinning/projects/story-telling-national-myths-international-fiction/twinspace/pages/students-profile

3. Our-schools

https://school-education.ec.europa.eu/en/etwinning/projects/story-telling-national-myths-international-fiction/twinspace/pages/our-schools

    3.1 Map

https://school-education.ec.europa.eu/en/etwinning/projects/story-telling-national-myths-international-fiction/twinspace/pages/map

4. Local Myths

https://school-education.ec.europa.eu/en/etwinning/projects/story-telling-national-myths-international-fiction/twinspace/pages/local-myths

   4.1 Collaboration

https://school-education.ec.europa.eu/en/etwinning/projects/story-telling-national-myths-international-fiction/twinspace/pages/collaboration

5. eTwinning-project-list

https://school-education.ec.europa.eu/en/etwinning/projects/story-telling-national-myths-international-fiction/twinspace/pages/etwinning-project-list

6. E-security

https://school-education.ec.europa.eu/en/etwinning/projects/story-telling-national-myths-international-fiction/twinspace/pages/e-security

   6.1 e-safety

https://school-education.ec.europa.eu/en/etwinning/projects/story-telling-national-myths-international-fiction/twinspace/pages/e-safety

   6.2 copyright

https://school-education.ec.europa.eu/en/etwinning/projects/story-telling-national-myths-international-fiction/twinspace/pages/copyright

   6.3 Parental-consent

https://school-education.ec.europa.eu/en/etwinning/projects/story-telling-national-myths-international-fiction/twinspace/pages/parental-consent

7. Photos

https://school-education.ec.europa.eu/en/etwinning/projects/story-telling-national-myths-international-fiction/twinspace/pages/photos

8. Final results

https://school-education.ec.europa.eu/en/etwinning/projects/story-telling-national-myths-international-fiction/twinspace/pages/final-results

9. Evaluation and Survey

9.1 Project-evaluation-teachers

https://school-education.ec.europa.eu/en/etwinning/projects/story-telling-national-myths-international-fiction/twinspace/pages/project-evaluation-teachers

9.2 Project-evaluation-students

https://school-education.ec.europa.eu/en/etwinning/projects/story-telling-national-myths-international-fiction/twinspace/pages/project-evaluation-students

Copyright

 

Copyright

Copyright is a type of intellectual property that protects original works of authorship as soon as an author fixes the work in a tangible form of expression. In copyright law, there are a lot of different types of works, including paintings, photographs, illustrations, musical compositions, sound recordings, computer programs, books, poems, blog posts, movies, architectural works, plays, and so much more!

 

Copyright is originality and fixation

Original Works

Works are original when they are independently created by a human author and have a minimal degree of creativity. Independent creation simply means that you create it yourself, without copying. The Supreme Court has said that, to be creative, a work must have a “spark” and “modicum” of creativity. There are some things, however, that are not creative, like: titles, names, short phrases, and slogans; familiar symbols or designs; mere variations of typographic ornamentation, lettering, or coloring; and mere listings of ingredients or contents. And always keep in mind that copyright protects expression, and never ideas, procedures, methods, systems, processes, concepts, principles, or discoveries.

Copyright is basically a legal way to protect creative works. It gives the creator, or whoever they assign the rights to, exclusive control over things like copying, distributing, adapting, and displaying the work. This applies to things like books, music, movies, art, and even computer software.

Here's a breakdown of copyright:

  • Who gets copyright: Anyone who creates an original work automatically owns the copyright.
  • What it protects: Copyright protects the expression of ideas, not the ideas themselves. So, the plot of a novel can't be copyrighted, but the specific words used to write the novel can be.
  • What rights does it grant: Copyright owners have exclusive rights to control how their work is used. This includes things like making copies, distributing copies, creating derivative works (like making a movie based on a book), and publicly displaying the work.
  • How long does it last: Copyright protection lasts for a limited time, typically the life of the creator plus an additional 70 years. After that, the work enters the public domain and can be freely used by anyone.

There's more to copyright law than this, but hopefully, this gives you a basic understanding of how it works.

Dissemination

Dissemination: Blog   https://storytelling-myths.blogspot.com/ ☝๐Ÿ˜‰