Published in House Report 94-1476
The purpose of the following guidelines is to state the minimum
and not the maximum standards of educational fair use under § 107
of H.R. 2233. The parties agree that the conditions determining the
extent of permissible copying for educational purposes may change in the
future; that certain types of copying permitted under these guidelines
may not be permissible in the future; and conversely that in the future
other types of copying not permitted under these guidelines may be permissible
under revised guidelines.
Moreover, the following statement of guidelines is not intended to limit the types of copying permitted under the standards of fair use under judicial decision and which are stated in § 107 of the Copyright Revision Bill. There may be instances in which copying which does not fall within the guidelines stated below may nonetheless be permitted under the criteria of fair use.
* Guidelines *
I. SINGLE COPYING FOR TEACHERS:
A single copy may be made of any of the following by or for a teacher at his or her individual request for his or her scholarly research or use in teaching or preparation to teach a class:
A. A chapter from a book;
B. An article from a periodical or newspaper;
C. A short story, short essay or short poem,
whether or not from a collective work;
D. A chart, graph, diagram, drawing, cartoon
or picture from a book, periodical, or newspaper.
II. MULTIPLE COPIES FOR CLASSROOM USE:
Multiple copies (not to exceed in any event more than one copy per pupil in a course) may be made by or for the teacher giving the course for classroom use or discussion; provided that:
A. The copying meets the tests of brevity and spontaneity
as defined below:
B. Meets the cumulative effect test as defined
below; and,
C. Each copy includes a notice of copyright.
DEFINITIONS
Brevity:
i. Poetry: (a) A complete poem if less than
250 words and if printed on not more than two pages or (b) from a longer
poem, an excerpt of not
more than 250 words.
ii. Prose: (a) Either a complete article, story
or essay of less than 2,500 words, or (b) an excerpt from any prose work
of not more than 1,000 words
or 10% of the work, whichever is less, but in any event a minimum of 500
words.
[Each of the numerical limits
stated in "i" and "ii" above may be expanded to permit the completion of
an unfinished
line of a poem or of an
unfinished prose paragraph.]
iii. Illustration: One chart, graph, diagram, drawing, cartoon or picture per book or per periodical issue.
iv. "Special" works: Certain works in poetry, prose
or in "poetic prose" which often combine language with illustrations
and which are intended sometimes
for children and at other times for a more general audience fall short
of 2,500
words in their entirety.
Paragraph "ii" above notwithstanding such "special works" may not be reproduced
in their
entirety; however, an excerpt
comprising not more than two of the published pages of such special work
and
containing not more than
10% of the words found in the text thereof, may be reproduced.
Spontaneity:
i. The copying is at the instance and inspiration of the individual teacher, and
ii. The inspiration and decision to use the work
and the moment of its use for maximum teaching effectiveness are
so close in time that it
would be unreasonable to expect a timely reply to a request for permission.
Cumulative Effect:
i. The copying of the material is for only one course in the school in which the copies are made.
ii. Not more than one short poem, article, story,
essay or two excerpts may be copied from the same author, not
more than three from the
same collective work or periodical volume during one class term.
iii. There shall not be more than nine instances of such multiple copying for one course during one class term.
[The limitations stated in "ii" and "iii" above shall
not apply to current news periodicals and newspapers and current
news sections of other periodicals.]
III. PROHIBITIONS AS TO I AND II ABOVE:
Notwithstanding any of the above, the following shall be prohibited:
A. Copying shall not be used to create
or to replace or substitute for anthologies, compilations or collective
works.
Such replacement
or substitution may occur whether copies of various works or excerpts therefrom
are
accumulated
or are reproduced and used separately.
B. There shall be no copying of or from
works intended to be "consumable" in the course of study or of teaching.
These include
workbooks, exercises, standardized tests and test booklets and answer sheets
and like
consumable
material.
C. Copying shall not:
a.
substitute for the purchase of books, publishers’ reprints or periodicals;
b.
be directed by high authority;
c.
be repeated with respect to the same item by the same teacher from term
to term.
D. No charge shall be made to the student beyond
the actual cost of the photocopying.
AGREED
March 19, 1976
AD HOC COMMITTEE ON COPYRIGHT LAW REVISION
By Sheldon Elliott
Steinbach
AUTHOR-PUBLISHER GROUP
AUTHORS LEAGUE OF AMERICA
By Irwin Karp, Counsel
ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN PUBLISHERS, INC.
By Alexander C. Hoffman, Chairman Copyright
Committee