Open Education Week: Day 4 > Where Can I Find Open Media Resources?

Recall from Tuesday’s post that Creative Commons licensing allows creators to grant others permission to use their media freely. Media can be illustrations, photos, videos, sounds and more – all of which have many purposes within education.

It can be difficult to determine if a video, song, or "googled" image has been posted with permission. Therefore, start with the following Creative Commons portals instead:

  • Wikimedia Commons – a collection of 45 million freely usable visual and audio media files to which anyone can contribute
  • Flickr Commons – hidden treasures from the world's public photography archives
  • ccMixter – music database that features sound effects and remixed music
  • reveal.js – open software that challenges the Office suite paradigm is hard to find. 
  • Vimeo and YouTube – use the search filter settings to limit results to only Creative Commons videos.

Want to learn more?
Visit the Humber Library’s copyright website, library.humber.ca/copyright, for links to more open media resources. 

Stay tuned for the conclusion to the Open Education Week series.