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Popularity Report

Total Popularity Score: 0

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Rank

Groups (12)

  • 2to1counterbalance

    2 to 1 Counterbalance

    40 members,25 bookmarks

    This group is set up in connection with an blog post on TechLearning, as a place to build positive links/examples/ideas to counterbalance negative stories/events on the Internet.

  • cffcoach

    CFF Coaches

    46 members,840 bookmarks

    This group is a common place for Classrooms for the Future to pool links for use with/by their teachers.

  • cis054

    cis054

    1 members,38 bookmarks

    I use this group for my online course

  • CITW08

    Classroom Instruction that Works

    35 members,230 bookmarks

    Specific teaching strategies have positive effects on student learning. Decades of research indicates which strategies make the biggest difference. Each of these strategies can be used by any teacher at any time.

  • classroom20

    Classroom 2.0

    436 members,927 bookmarks

    A place for members of www.Classroom20.com to share links, Classroom 2.0 is social networking site devoted to those interested in the practical application of computer technology (especially Web 2.0) in the classroom and in their own professional development.

  • haverfordllc

    haverfordllc

    1 members,51 bookmarks

    Group for the Haverford College Foreign Language Faculty

  • itselementary

    it's elementary

    22 members,227 bookmarks

    This group supports the work of It's Elementary webcast (part of Ed Tech Talk). Our blog/website is: http:itselementary/edublogs.org

  • mvps-vs-instructor-course

    MVPS VS Instructor Course

    13 members,34 bookmarks

    This group is for MVPS participants in the ETLO Instructing Virtual School Courses courseto collect and tag quality online resources for use when teaching virtual school courses.

  • park-tech-faca-2008

    Park Tech FACA 2008

    4 members,113 bookmarks

    no description

  • school-library-media-specialist-students

    School Library Media Specialist Students

    5 members,19 bookmarks

    This group is for graduate students in a school library media specialist program.

  • webtop

    The Web Top

    18 members,130 bookmarks

    A collection of Web 2.0 links with a focus on Work 2.0, and Free Open Source Software.

  • whscff

    Wissahickon HS Classrooms for the Future

    4 members,118 bookmarks

    Diigo group for the CFF team of Wissahickon High School

Bookmark History

Saved by 615 people (190 private), first by anonymouse user on 2006-03-02


Public Comment

on 2006-05-19 by viggenjakt

A nonprofit organization that offers flexible copyright licences for creative works

on 2006-06-09 by justinyc

Creative Commons is a nonprofit organization that offers flexible copyright licenses for creative works.

on 2006-06-12 by ajp-diigo

Creative Commons provides a directory of resource people have made available for re-use under CC licence terms.

on 2006-07-25 by akatsuki

Copyleft licenses used to share and enhance creativity.

on 2006-09-13 by jasonbentley

Creative Commons is a nonprofit organization that offers flexible copyright licenses for creative works.

on 2006-09-15 by cryztalvisions

Creative Commons is a nonprofit organization that offers flexible copyright licenses for creative works

on 2006-10-07 by susannek

Enabling the legal sharing and reuse of cultural, educational, and scientific works.

on 2006-11-14 by mikeheth

Flexible copyright for creative work

on 2006-12-24 by srcr--

Creative Commons provides free tools that let authors, scientists, artists, and educators easily mark their creative work with the freedoms they want it to carry. You can use CC to change your copyright terms from "All Rights Reserved" to "Some Rights Res

on 2007-04-09 by bookwyrmish

"Creative Commons provides free tools that let authors, scientists, artists, and educators easily mark their creative work with the freedoms they want it to carry."

on 2008-07-06 by witchyrichy

Fair use and creative commons are really two different things. Fair use is a provision of traditional copyright that grants teachers the right to use materials without permission within their classrooms. Creative Commons allows users to change their copyright so materials can be used both in and out of the classroom, ie, republished on websites or as part of remixes.

Public Sticky notes

Creative Commons provides free tools that let authors, scientists, artists, and educators easily mark their creative work with the freedoms they want it to carry.

Highlighted by bookwyrmish

Creative Commons licenses provide a flexible range of protections and freedoms for authors, artists, and educators. We have built upon the "all rights reserved" concept of traditional copyright to offer a voluntary "some rights reserved" approach. We're a nonprofit organization. All of our tools are free.

Highlighted by samuelcartaxo

Share, Remix, Reuse — Legally

Creative Commons provides free tools that let authors, scientists, artists, and educators easily mark their creative work with the freedoms they want it to carry. You can use CC to change your copyright terms from "All Rights Reserved" to "Some Rights Reserved."

We're a nonprofit organization. Everything we do — including the software we create — is free.

Highlighted by margo57

Share, Remix, Reuse — Legally

Creative Commons provides free tools that let authors, scientists, artists, and educators easily mark their creative work with the freedoms they want it to carry. You can use CC to change your copyright terms from "All Rights Reserved" to "Some Rights Reserved."

We're a nonprofit organization. Everything we do — including the software we create — is free

Highlighted by jaybazz66

Creative Commons

Highlighted by larryphillips

Share, Remix, Reuse — Legally

Creative Commons provides free tools that let authors, scientists, artists, and educators easily mark their creative work with the freedoms they want it to carry. You can use CC to change your copyright terms from "All Rights Reserved" to "Some Rights Reserved."

We're a nonprofit organization. Everything we do — including the software we create — is free.

Highlighted by burnsk

on 2008-04-05 by burnsk

Fair Use allows us to use Creative Commons materials for school work and teaching materials as long as we give attribution, or credit, to the originator. Mrs. Burns

Creative Commons provides free tools that let authors, scientists

Highlighted by larryphillips

CC Croatia, lead by Diana Kovaèeviæ Remenariæ and Tomislav Medak and in affiliation with the Zagreb-based NGO Multimedia Institute [mi2], was one of the first jurisdictions to port the earliest version of the licenses (in 2004) and continues to be one of the most active Creative Commons projects worldwide.

Highlighted by larryphillips

CC Croatia, lead by Diana Kovaèeviæ Remenariæ and Tomislav Medak and in affiliation with the Zagreb-based NGO Multimedia Institute [mi2], was one of the first jurisdictions to port the earliest version of the licenses (in 2004) and continues to be one of the most active Creative Commons projects worldwide.

Highlighted by larryphillips

Came across this awesome business that’s been building up traction in Japan called C-shirt — powered by media-wiki company Nota that leverages Creative Commons licensing in a pretty unconventional way. At first glance, it might seem like one of the innumerable t-shirt vendor sites out there — but it is, in fact, way, way cooler.

First, the conventional idea: users submit t-shirt designs which can be viewed online and ordered for printing. However, the twist is that since all the designs are placed under CC, Nota provides an interface with which to edit and reproduce these designs accordingly. Once you’ve remixed it to your liking, C-shirt will print and ship your unique version right to your door. Depending on the license, you can even repost your new design to the site.

Even better, the service is outfitted to work with some enabled mobile devices, so if you see a shirt you like on the street, you can scan the Quick Response (QR) code included on each design with your phone, which will capture a unique address where you can load and edit the t-shirt before getting it yourself.

Very slick. It’s mostly been active in Japan, but I’m hoping they start to make the crossover into the States. Thinking it’d be easy to expand this into a whole range of products — hats, lunchboxes, computers…

Highlighted by margo57