The TEACH Act
The Technology, Education and Copyright Harmonization (TEACH) Act was signed into law in October 2002. It revises the section of the U.S. Copyright Act that governs the use of copyrighted material for the purpose of education. Specifically the TEACH Act modifies and clarifies the ways in which copyrighted material may be used in distance education by an “accredited non-profit educational institution,” without permission of the copyright owner.
The TEACH Act extends earlier allowances granted to educators, but also specifies new requirements for how far educational institutions must go in preventing copyright infringement. Educators are only protected under the TEACH Act if they work for an accredited institution that stands in compliance with the new requirements. In essence, the greater freedoms granted to instructors are balanced with greater responsibility for oversight or management of distance education at the institutional level.
Benefits of the TEACH Act
The TEACH Act allows instructors to do the following things, again, under specified conditions:
- Performances and displays of nearly all types of copyrighted works;
- Transmission of digital materials to students at distant education locations;
- Storage of copyrighted content for brief periods of time, such as that which occurs in the process of transmitting digital content; and
- Creating digital versions of print or analog works
Requirements of the TEACH Act
In order to take advantage of these benefits, instructors and institutions must meet certain policy requirements specified by the TEACH Act. Reasonable measures to ensure that only enrolled students will have access to materials during the course of instruction must be in place before TEACH exemptions can be made. Below is a list of some of the other primary requirements:
- The teaching must occur at an accredited, non-profit educational institution.
- Only lawfully acquired copies may be used.
- Use is limited to performances and displays. The TEACH Act does not apply to materials that are for students’ independent use and retention, such as textbooks or other readings.
- Use of materials must be within the context of “mediated instructional activities” analogous to the activities of a face-to-face class session.
- The materials to be used should not include those primarily marketed for the purposes of distance education (e.g. an electronic textbook or a multimedia tutorial).
- Only those students enrolled in the class should have access to the material.
- Reasonable efforts must be made to prevent students from retaining and distributing the material after viewing it (this means no printing, saving, downloading, etc.) Also referred to as “downstream controls.”
- If a digital version of the work is already available, then an analog copy cannot be converted for educational use.
- Students must be informed that the materials they access are protected by copyright.
- The educational institution must have a policy on the use of copyrighted materials and provide informative resources for faculty advising them on their rights.
While the TEACH Act thus expands the scope of educators’ rights to perform and display works for distance education, the new law still contrasts markedly from the “classroom exemption” provision of Section 110(1) that provides an absolute exemption to the exclusive rights of the copyright holder for performances and displays in face-to-face classroom instruction. In a classroom environment an educator may show or perform any work, regardless of format, with no permission required and without paying royalties; under the TEACH Act, the same educator would have to scale back some of those materials to show them to distant students.
The opportunities for applying the TEACH Act may be limited in scope, but keep in mind that you can always fall back on fair use when deciding whether or not to use copyrighted works in distance education classes.
Additional Resources on the TEACH Act
- The TEACH Act, S. 487 - original bill
- Copyright for Libraries: TEACH Act - American Library Association
- Distance Education and the TEACH Act - American Library Association
- TEACH Act Flowchart - Duke University