educational institutions

Australia

Screenrights' Australian educational services allow educational institutions to copy from television and radio for educational purposes and to communicate those copies, provided the communication is to staff and students of the institution only. These services are provided for in the Australian Copyright Act.

All universities, TAFEs, government schools and almost all other schools are licensed by Screenrights to copy from radio and television. Vocational Education Training providers, ELICOS Colleges and other training institutions can also get a licence from Screenrights and make the most of television as a teaching resource.

Screenrights also licenses educational institutions to communicate copies they make (for example, by making copies available online to students).

Screenrights' appointment by the Government

Screenrights is a non-profit organisation appointed by the Australian Government to administer provisions in the Australian Copyright Act allowing educational institutions to copy from radio and television and to communicate those copies, provided they pay a fee.

Screenrights' role is to enter agreements with participating institutions, monitor their use of material and collect and distribute fees to the rightsholders in the programs that are identified as having been copied or communicated. This is done on a non-profit basis, with Screenrights deducting only its administrative overheads from the money it collects.

Because this appointment has been made by the Government, Screenrights must put its annual accounts before each House of Parliament and comply with other guidelines issued by the Attorney-General's Department.

Copying without a licence

Institutions that do not have a Screenrights licence and copy from television or radio may infringe copyright, unless they obtain prior permission from all the relevant rightsholders in the program. The practical impossibility of doing this led to the educational copying provisions being established in the first place.

Audiovisual material being copied

The following chart represents the breakdown of audiovisual material being copied by Australian and New Zealand educational institutions in 2008.

genre

More information

back to top

EnhanceTV website EnhanceTV
				 2006 EnhanceTV website, EnhanceTV

Vote Yes for Aborigines was about an event in modern Australian and Indigenous political history so it can be studied within the scope of a number of subjects on school curriculums. More importantly, it told the history from an Indigenous point of view.
- Denise Haslem Producer Denise Haslem Productions