For more information on attribution, see these guides by Creative Commons:
This page is borrowed from Attributing Creative Commons Licenses by Canvas in Canvas Free for Teacher offered under a CC BY 4.0 license. For the full Canvas course on OER, see Introduction to Open Educational Resources.
Materials on this page were adapted from:
4.1 Choosing and Applying a CC License, Creative Commons Certificate for Librarians , Creative Commons , offered under a CC Attribution .
"Creative Commons 10th Birthday Celebration San Francisco" by tvol is licensed under CC BY 2.0.
Best practices for attribution, by CC Wiki licensed to the public under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license.
“Open Attribution Builder” by Open Washington, SBCTC licensed under CC BY 4.0
Open Attribute is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.
How to attribute a Creative Commons licensed work?, by CCCOER, licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License .
The six basic Creative Commons licenses require attribution. Public domain material doesn't legally require attribution. Attribution is a best practice in an educational setting - it helps you and students to understand the importance of identifying sources.
So how do you attribute?
Giving proper attribution to open works is easy if you remember a few simple rules and take the following steps:
Not only do you want to properly give credit for work, but you want people to be able to find the original resource easily.
When providing attribution, the goal is to mark the work with full TASL information. When you don’t have some of the TASL information about a work, do the best you can and include as much detail as possible.
Here is a picture that has been properly attributed with TASL:
"Creative Commons 10th Birthday Celebration San Francisco (Links to an external site.)" by tvol (Links to an external site.) is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (Links to an external site.)
(Links to an external site.)Title: "Creative Commons 10th Birthday Celebration San Francisco"
Author: "tvol (Links to an external site.)" - linked to his profile page
Source: "Creative Commons 10th Birthday Celebration San Francisco (Links to an external site.)" - linked to original Flickr page
License: "CC BY 2.0 (Links to an external site.)" - linked to license deed
You should always attribute the original work in any derivative work and identify that changes have been made. Often the simplest way to do this is to use the phrase “Adapted from …” or “This work is a derivative of…” and attribute the original work as you would normally. If your work incorporates a number of derivative works, you might say, “Adapted from the following sources…” and list each original work sequentially. Keep in mind that materials that have the Non-Derivatives license term (Links to an external site.) (CC-BY-ND, CC-BY-NC-ND) are only allowed to be copied or redistributed as-is but NOT remixed.
For text resources (eg. books, worksheets, PowerPoint slides, etc), include the attribution details where it naturally makes sense, such as immediately preceding or following the work, or as the footer along the bottom of the page on which the CC work appears. For videos, include the attribution information near the work as it appears on screen during the video. For sound recordings (eg podcasts), mention the name of the artist during the recording (like a radio announcement) and provide full attribution details in text near the podcast where it is being stored (eg. blog, school intranet, learning management system, etc).