Teachers must respect others' rights, and others must respect the teachers rights.
That is the message on this page on e-learning and the law.
E-learning and the law is about legal rights on e-learning, for instance:
E-learning and the law is a collaboration between:
The teachers rights
A teacher producing his own e-learning material for the internet, has the copyright to the material, and it can only be used by others, if the teacher permits it.
The teacher also has the rights to his teaching according to the copyright law and the personal data law. Others are not allowed to record and web cast the teaching without the teachers permission.
Others rights
The teacher has a legal duty to respect copyright to the work he or she wishes to use in connection with e-learning.
You are not allowed to distribute an article to the students or put a pricture you have found on Google on your mateterial, without examining the legal aspects first.
Reference group and workshops
The construction of the e-learning and the law webpages is a cooperation between the universities. User needs and work situations are clarified thorugh surveys and contact with the users. A reference group with a broad representation meets once or twice a year to discuss the content and form of the webpages. It is the intention to invite to workshops. The workshops are open to everyone with an interest in the questions around e-learning and the law.
Contact
To get to know more about the service e-learning and the law, contact
Helle Meldgaard, projectmanager, e-learning, Forskningsnettet