Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

Evaluating the current copyright provisions for the reproduction and dissemination of electronic educational material in distance learning

There is a marked increase in distance learning courses. According to the literature, online courses have penetrated 78.09% of undergraduate level programmes and 64.3% of doctoral research institutions. The amplified trend towards online learning courses raises questions pertaining to access to educ...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lamont, Kim Tracy
Other Authors: Tong, Lee-Ann
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Intellectual Property Research Unit 2015
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613226203611136
access_status_str Open Access
author Lamont, Kim Tracy
author2 Tong, Lee-Ann
author_browse Lamont, Kim Tracy
Tong, Lee-Ann
author_facet Tong, Lee-Ann
Lamont, Kim Tracy
author_sort Lamont, Kim Tracy
collection Thesis
description There is a marked increase in distance learning courses. According to the literature, online courses have penetrated 78.09% of undergraduate level programmes and 64.3% of doctoral research institutions. The amplified trend towards online learning courses raises questions pertaining to access to educational material online. Digitisation has enabled the rapid copying of content and dissemination thereof to better enable access to learning for all through such digital availability of educational material. However, whether there are sufficient exceptions within copyright law to better facilitate the magnanimous growth of distance learners is debatable. The aim of this minor dissertation is to determine whether there are international instruments such as the Berne Convention, the Trade Related Intellectual Property Agreement (TRIPs), and the WIPO Copyright Treaty (WCT) that better enable the electronic reproduction and distribution of work for distance learners. To understand the fair dealing and fair use provision specifically for distance learning in specific countries, which include South Africa, United Kingdom and United States Methodology: A large literature search was undertaken, which included legislation, published journal articles, websites and magazines to characterise the current state of access to educational material for distance learners in SA, UK and USA. The findings show that there is not sufficient room for access to educational material for distance learners in a fair dealing model. This can be demonstrated in the enumerated list that must be adhered to for fair dealing to subsist. This is demonstrated in section 12 of the South African Copyright Act as well as section 32-36 in United Kingdom's Copyright Designs and Patents Act. However, in the United States there has been development within the codification of fair use terms in section 107 of the United States Copyright Act that have provided provisions for multiple copies as long as the four criteria for fair use are fulfilled. Furthermore, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act was implemented which has therein specified provisions for the digitisation of a work for distance learners. There are not sufficient exceptions within copyright law for access to digitised educational material for distance learners in South Africa and the United Kingdom. The current exceptions are narrow and limited. Therefore, a recommendation would be to broaden the scope of the provisions to increase the flexibility and better to accommodate access to educational material for distance learners in this information age where digital networks and access are growing exponentially. Some countries such as the Unites States have come to this realisation early and have started to accommodate digitisation of works and distance learning models through the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and the codification of the fair use model in section 107 of the United States Copyright Act.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/15212
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:46.693Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2015
publishDateRange 2015
publishDateSort 2015
publisher Intellectual Property Research Unit
publisherStr Intellectual Property Research Unit
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/15212 Evaluating the current copyright provisions for the reproduction and dissemination of electronic educational material in distance learning Lamont, Kim Tracy Tong, Lee-Ann Intellectual Property Law There is a marked increase in distance learning courses. According to the literature, online courses have penetrated 78.09% of undergraduate level programmes and 64.3% of doctoral research institutions. The amplified trend towards online learning courses raises questions pertaining to access to educational material online. Digitisation has enabled the rapid copying of content and dissemination thereof to better enable access to learning for all through such digital availability of educational material. However, whether there are sufficient exceptions within copyright law to better facilitate the magnanimous growth of distance learners is debatable. The aim of this minor dissertation is to determine whether there are international instruments such as the Berne Convention, the Trade Related Intellectual Property Agreement (TRIPs), and the WIPO Copyright Treaty (WCT) that better enable the electronic reproduction and distribution of work for distance learners. To understand the fair dealing and fair use provision specifically for distance learning in specific countries, which include South Africa, United Kingdom and United States Methodology: A large literature search was undertaken, which included legislation, published journal articles, websites and magazines to characterise the current state of access to educational material for distance learners in SA, UK and USA. The findings show that there is not sufficient room for access to educational material for distance learners in a fair dealing model. This can be demonstrated in the enumerated list that must be adhered to for fair dealing to subsist. This is demonstrated in section 12 of the South African Copyright Act as well as section 32-36 in United Kingdom's Copyright Designs and Patents Act. However, in the United States there has been development within the codification of fair use terms in section 107 of the United States Copyright Act that have provided provisions for multiple copies as long as the four criteria for fair use are fulfilled. Furthermore, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act was implemented which has therein specified provisions for the digitisation of a work for distance learners. There are not sufficient exceptions within copyright law for access to digitised educational material for distance learners in South Africa and the United Kingdom. The current exceptions are narrow and limited. Therefore, a recommendation would be to broaden the scope of the provisions to increase the flexibility and better to accommodate access to educational material for distance learners in this information age where digital networks and access are growing exponentially. Some countries such as the Unites States have come to this realisation early and have started to accommodate digitisation of works and distance learning models through the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and the codification of the fair use model in section 107 of the United States Copyright Act. 2015-11-21T09:40:11Z 2015-11-21T09:40:11Z 2015 Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15212 eng application/pdf Intellectual Property Research Unit Faculty of Law University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Intellectual Property Law
Lamont, Kim Tracy
Evaluating the current copyright provisions for the reproduction and dissemination of electronic educational material in distance learning
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Evaluating the current copyright provisions for the reproduction and dissemination of electronic educational material in distance learning
title_full Evaluating the current copyright provisions for the reproduction and dissemination of electronic educational material in distance learning
title_fullStr Evaluating the current copyright provisions for the reproduction and dissemination of electronic educational material in distance learning
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating the current copyright provisions for the reproduction and dissemination of electronic educational material in distance learning
title_short Evaluating the current copyright provisions for the reproduction and dissemination of electronic educational material in distance learning
title_sort evaluating the current copyright provisions for the reproduction and dissemination of electronic educational material in distance learning
topic Intellectual Property Law
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15212
work_keys_str_mv AT lamontkimtracy evaluatingthecurrentcopyrightprovisionsforthereproductionanddisseminationofelectroniceducationalmaterialindistancelearning