OER for film editing

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Sam Cheng

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Jun 17, 2022, 10:06:38 AM6/17/22
to ON...@ryerson.ca

Hello,

 

Happy Friday!

 

I’m curious to know what some schools with a film program use for students to practice film editing? A film professor is interested in raw, unedited footages and audio files for our students to learn on and practice with. She has been obtaining permission from students to use their materials for other students to practice with.

 

I also wonder if there is an OER with these types of resources?

 

I would appreciate any information you’re willing to share. Thank you!

 

Regards,

Sam

 

 

 

Sam Cheng, BA, MLIS (she/her)

Open Education and Copyright Librarian

Library and Learning Services

sam....@sheridancollege.ca

 

Sheridan

 

 

Ann Ludbrook

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Jun 17, 2022, 5:15:18 PM6/17/22
to Sam Cheng, ON...@ryerson.ca
Hi Sam:

I might try Vimeo CC BY Attribution videos as you can download those more easily than those on Youtube CC BY material (there is a download button for various sizes) Creative Commons - Attribution License on Vimeo - this is more than 2.3 million videos. The students would just need to attribute each video they remix material from.

Other Vimeo CC content is here: Creative Commons on Vimeo which has other types of CC licenses, only some allow remixing, and one PD attribution collection of about 180, 000K videos that would not need attribution

Internet Archive is also a great source of public domain materials, allows downloads, and has the Prelinger Archives: Prelinger Archives : Free Movies : Free Download, Borrow and Streaming : Internet Archive

There is also the National Screening Room via the Library of Congress which has download functionality and clear copyright status: National Screening Room, Available Online | Library of Congress (loc.gov)

Pexels also have some video content that is free to use with no need to attribute (about 2.2K videos) 150+ Best Free Public domain 4K Stock Video Footage & Royalty-Free HD Video Clips (pexels.com)

Those are just a few sources. It looks like there are several other free resources out there. I might add a Video source tab to our OER guide as we don't have a robust one.

Hope that was helpful!

Thanks

Ann 








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Ann Ludbrook, 
Copyright and Scholarly Engagement Librarian 
Toronto Metropolitan University (Formerly Ryerson University) 

She/Her

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