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Monday, May 10, 2021

Monday Medley: Freely Licensed Images, Icons, and ClipArt




Let's talk for a minute about copyright, fair use, and using images from the internet. When creating a presentation for your students how often do you consider whether the images you have selected meet copyright guidelines? While it is unlikely that the "copyright police" will come looking for you if you use an image or images without permission or proper attribution, we really should try to be good role models for our students. An easy way to model good digital citizenship is to ensure that the images that you use are freely usable and do not violate any copyright rules. You might be wondering where to look for copyright free images. 

Here are a few good places to start: 

Unsplash has a collection of over 2 million free, high-resolution photographs that can be downloaded and used for free, even for commercial use. Attribution is not required although it is recommended as a best practice. You can search for images by topic, collection, and more. Unsplash even has a collection of images that can be downloaded and used as desktop wallpaper. This is my favorite place to find images! 

EDUImages by All4Ed are free to use, share, and adapt with proper attribution as long as it's not for commercial use. There are more than 700 images in the collection, all revolving around education. You can do a general image search or filter your search by educational topic, grade level, or photo location. All images in the collection were taken in 7 schools across the United States. BIPOC are represented in these photos.

Pics4Learning has copyright friendly photos and illustrations that are safe and free for education. Images can be downloaded or saved to Google Drive. Citation information is included so that images can be properly attributed. 

Use CC Search to locate images that are available for reuse. You can filter your search to locate images that you are free to modify or adapt. Each image contains information about how the it can be reused. Citation information is available so that you can credit the creator. Some images can even be used for commercial purposes. 

Iconsmania has free, editable icons, illustrations, and clip art images. (The creator of this collection is the same person who created Slidesmania, the free Google Slides template website.) 

Google Fonts has an icon library that is free to use as long as you don't try to sell them. If you are trying to create a directions sheet for students or other educators and you need an image of an icon to accompany your text you can download the image as a PNG and insert it into your document. For example, this undo icon: 




Public Domain Clipart contains over 25,000 images that are free to use. However, the site does have a disclaimer stating, " As we would like to continue to offer this collection of images to the public, we require that users intending on utilizing images research the copyright and public domain status of the images for themselves prior to any use, such as commercial use." You have to contend with advertising on this site but with a huge library of images it's worth overlooking the ads if you want a lot of choices for clipart!

These are just a few options available if you are looking for freely licensed images, icons, and clipart. If you are interested in learning more about copyright, creative commons licensing, and fair use I would recommend checking out this extensive resource, posted in this Campus Press blog post: The Educator's Guide to Copyright, Fair Use, and Creative Commons.

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Photo by Umberto on Unsplash

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