Intellectual Property Policy and Procedures
Table of Contents
- Philosophy and Scope
- Definitions for the Purpose of this Policy and Procedures
- Responsible Senior Leader and Responsible Office
- Entities Affected by this Policy and Procedures
- Procedures
I. Philosophy and Scope
Frederick Community College (“FCC” or the “College”) encourages, incentivizes, and
recognizes research, publishing, and other activities by faculty and staff that further
the institution’s mission. The College seeks to achieve a fair balance between the
rights of Creators who are employees and independent contractors, and the rights of
the College related to intellectual property developed using its resources. This Policy
and Procedures applies to the creation of intellectual property by members of the
College community.
To ensure that FCC complies with laws governing patents, copyrights, trademarks and
other intellectual property rights, this Policy and Procedures establishes procedures
for all members of the College community while performing official College tasks.
Procedures are outlined in general terms and may not cover every possible situation.
Certain provisions and procedures may not apply to students’ work in the classroom.
Contact the Provost/Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs, Continuing Education,
and Workforce Development for clarification as needed.
II. Definitions for the Purpose of this Policy and Procedures
- “Intellectual property” refers to the product of creative or scholarly efforts, whether or not protected by
patent, copyright, trademark, trade secret laws, contract, or agreement. Expressions
of original ideas, objects, data, applications, and processes are considered to be
intellectual property. Expressions could include written material, spoken descriptions,
models, sketches, musical scores (including any accompanying words), sculptures, software
code and programs (and related manuals and/or documentation), websites or web pages,
audiovisual works, architectural works, dramatic works (including any accompanying
music), pantomimes and choreographic works, and paintings. Such property includes,but
is not limited to, inventions, goods, materials, course material, lab manuals, instruments,
equipment, biological organisms, chemical compositions, mask works, computer software,
graphics, literary and musical works, and trademarks. The intellectual property may
be in tangible or intangible form. Intellectual property in tangible form may be physically
distributed. Intellectual property may be protected by one or more of the following:
patent, copyright, trade secret, trademark, contract, or agreement.
- “College resources” refers to College premises, property, IT resources, personnel, branding, or funding.
- “College premises” refers to buildings or grounds owned, leased, operated, controlled, supervised, or
temporarily used by the College.
- “College community” refers to trustees, students, and all employees of the College as well as any independent contractors or other third parties to the extent articulated under contractual agreements.
- “Creative Commons licensing” refers to licensing that enables creators of copyrighted work to grant permission
to others to retain (make and own a copy), reuse (use in a wide range of ways), revise
(adapt, modify, and improve), remix (combine two or more), and redistribute (share
with others).
- “Creator” refers to any member of the College community who is the originator of intellectual
property.
- “Fair Use” refers to the right to use copyrighted materials without consent of the copyright
owner, usually for scholarship, teaching, research, or criticism, as stipulated by
Section 504(c)(2) of the Copyright Act.
- “Incidental use of College resources” refers to the normal use of office space and facilities generally available to all
College employees, such as libraries, computers, equipment, and support staff and
does not (1) involve the procurement of special supplies, services, equipment, or
other support by the College; (2) constitute more than ten percent (10%) of the normal
duty time of any administrator or classified employee in any semester; (3) involve
released or reassigned time; (4) demand more than 20% of the normal work hours of
assisting College employees in any semester. Incidental resources that are available
to employees generally should not be counted in the assessment of the use of College
resources or general funds.
- “Invention” refers to an invention, which may or may not be patentable, and is: (1) a new design
for a product or device; (2) a new process, sequence, or methodology; or (3) a new
use or application of a product, device, process, sequence, or methodology. An invention
may also be an improvement of any of these three.
- “Information Technology resources” refers to resources that include, but are not limited to, telephones, mobile devices,
computers, printers, scanners, servers, networking devices, public access computers,
and licensed software and services. These resources are often involved in the processing,
storage, accessing, and transmission of data owned by, controlled by, or contracted
to the College.
- “Patent” refers to any work recognized by a national patent office to have been created or
invented by the bearer of the patent, alongside the rights and protections granted
by ownership of the patent.
- “Student Work” refers to work that is prepared by an FCC student.
- “Trademark” refers to any symbol or combination of symbols which serve to identify the commercial
source of items marked by the symbol.
- “Trade Secret” refers to any information, including, but not limited to, a formula, pattern, compilation,
computer software, data, device, method, technique, process, or application that:
(1) derives independent economic value, actual or potential, from not being generally
known to and not being readily ascertainable by proper means by other persons who
can obtain economic value from its disclosure or use, and (2) is the subject of efforts
that are reasonable, under existing circumstances, to maintain its secrecy.
- “Work for Hire” refers to language in the Copyright Act of 1976, as amended, and refers to copyrightable intellectual property, which is, for the purposes of this Policy and Procedures, deliverable to FCC, (1) prepared by an employee within the scope of their employment, or (2) produced as a result of a special order or commission by FCC. Work created pursuant to a research agreement between FCC and an outside party, either a private sector company or a governmental agency, is considered to be within the scope of employment.
III. Responsible Senior Leader and Responsible Office
Provost/Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs, Continuing Education, and Workforce
Development
Center for Teaching and Learning
IV. Entities Affected by this Policy and Procedures
The College community
V. Procedures
- Ownership and Rights to Intellectual Property
- Ownership
- For intellectual property created with incidental use of College resources or no use
of College resources, the Creator retains ownership.
- The College owns intellectual property created using College resources, unless the
College, in its sole discretion, recognizes a specific exception. By way of example
only, for intellectual property created using College resources but not at the direction
of the College, employees can seek prior approval for Creator ownership. Should such
approval be granted by the College, an agreement may be established between the College
and the Creator, which maintains the right of the College to use the intellectual
property for its educational mission and the development of its employees, and a royalty
share may be established between the College and the employee. Other exceptions may
be made by the College on a case-by-case basis (e.g., Faculty & Staff Writers Group,
Sabbaticals).
- For intellectual property created at the direction of the College and with College
resources, the College retains ownership and rights to the work, subject to specific
written agreements between the College and the Creator to the contrary.
- Course and program descriptions, course justifications, student learning outcomes,
course syllabi, and any other curriculum materials submitted by any FCC faculty member
or staff member to the College Curriculum Review Committee for approval of a course,
degree or certificate program, or other course of study shall be considered work for
hire and within the scope of employment of any such faculty member or staff member.
The copyright in such curriculum material shall belong to FCC.
- The College does not claim ownership for works developed by a member prior to becoming
a member of the FCC community and prior to having any access to College resources
such as works brought to the College from another place of employment.
- The College shall own and have all rights to any inventions, trademarks, patents,
and/or trade secrets discovered, created, or developed by College employees using
FCC time, resources, facilities, or equipment, except as otherwise provided in this
Policy and Procedures. This right shall include, but not be limited to, inventions
that are (a) developed in the course of or pursuant to a sponsored project or other
agreement, or (b) developed under a written agreement with FCC and with funds provided
by FCC, or (c) developed using FCC time, resources, facilities, or equipment, or (d)
offered to FCC by the Creators and accepted by FCC. Creators shall have the right
to guide the use by FCC of their inventions.
- The College has the right to use Student Work for assessment and other non-commercial
purposes without entering into any agreement with the student. An agreement must be
established with the student if Student Work is to be used by the College or a College
employee for other purposes.
- For intellectual property created with incidental use of College resources or no use
of College resources, the Creator retains ownership.
- Exceptions to Creator Ownership of Intellectual Property
Unless prior approval is established and, unless otherwise stated below, an agreement is entered into between the College and the Creator, the following types of intellectual property are not owned by the Creator:
- Work for Hire - For purposes of ownership of works for hire, ownership vests in the
College, unless there is a specific written agreement regarding the creation of the
work and that agreement specifically vests title or ownership in someone other than
the College. In the case of non-employee third parties with which the College is contracting
for services related to creation or development of the work, it is the general policy
of the College (subject to exception approved by the President or the designee of
the President) to enter into written “works for hire” agreements in which the College
will obtain or retain ownership rights in the work as part of the agreement for work
or services. Where the College owns the copyright in a work, it may acknowledge Creators
(including Creators of works for hire) who have made a substantial creative contribution
to the work.
- Institutional Works - Work produced as a collaborative effort under the supervision
and/or direction of the College.
The College owns institutional works. Accordingly, software and software-related documentation, as well as other works created by employees at the direction of the College for administrative support purposes, such as documents for administrative use and computer software created by non-faculty staff employees of the College for use by the College, are considered works for hire. - Educational Works - Work that is related to curriculum and materials used for the
primary purpose of instruction for FCC students.
Unless otherwise negotiated prior to their creation, educational works created or developed for the primary purpose of instruction for FCC students by College employees during their employment with the College are owned by the College and the College has the right to modify, amend, and develop derivative uses for College purposes.
Lecture notes, articles, books, games, movies, simulations, software, videos, art and music works and other publications created by faculty members and technology created outside of the classroom and brought into the classroom are not considered within the scope of employment for purposes of this Policy and Procedures unless there is a specific written agreement between FCC and a faculty member, which provides that a deliverable will be considered a work for hire.
d. Grant Funded and Sponsored Works
When work is created with the support of an external entity through an agreement such as a grant or contract, and when any term or condition of the agreement conflicts or is inconsistent with this Policy and Procedures, then the conflicting or inconsistent term(s) contained in the agreement shall determine ownership of the intellectual property in that work.
e. Non-Credit Adjunct Faculty Works
With respect to non-credit instruction, the College will retain rights to unlimited use of all course titles and descriptions, regardless of the non-credit adjunct faculty’s employment status with the College, unless material is under copyright to another party. Course materials (e.g., syllabi, lesson plans, tests, quizzes) created outside the scope of the non-credit adjunct faculty’s normal responsibilities and produced without the use of College resources remain the sole intellectual property of the non credit adjunct faculty member. A copy of all course materials will be kept by the Program Manager.
- Work for Hire - For purposes of ownership of works for hire, ownership vests in the
College, unless there is a specific written agreement regarding the creation of the
work and that agreement specifically vests title or ownership in someone other than
the College. In the case of non-employee third parties with which the College is contracting
for services related to creation or development of the work, it is the general policy
of the College (subject to exception approved by the President or the designee of
the President) to enter into written “works for hire” agreements in which the College
will obtain or retain ownership rights in the work as part of the agreement for work
or services. Where the College owns the copyright in a work, it may acknowledge Creators
(including Creators of works for hire) who have made a substantial creative contribution
to the work.
- Ownership
- Copyright and Fair-Use
The “Fair Use” doctrine allows educators and students to use copyrighted materials without seeking prior approval to certain types of resources under certain conditions without prior approval, which may include College-owned copyrighted material. For additional guidance, please see the Copyright Policy and Procedures. - Agreements Related to Ownership of Intellectual Property
As indicated throughout this Policy and Procedures, the College may enter into legal agreements related to the creation and/or ownership of intellectual property. Agreements will be dealt with on a case-by-case basis, with the goal to achieve a fair balance between the rights of Creators who are employees of the College, and the rights of the College related to the intellectual property developed using its resources. - Creative Commons Licensing
Copyright owners and Creators are encouraged to add a Creative Commons (CC) license to appropriate works for the purposes of sharing and dissemination. For more information about Creative Commons licenses, see the Copyright Resource Guide or contact the Copyright Resource Officer.
Copyright designation for works that are subject to an intellectual property agreement between the Creator and FCC are determined by the agreement. However, some works and materials created through publicly funded contracts and grants (grantors) may require open licensing, published as an Open Educational Resource (OER), and carry a specific Creative Commons license. Grantees may be required to develop learning materials such as books, courses, modules, seminars, tutoring systems, and simulations as Open Educational Resources and use industry-leading e-learning open standards and specifications. In accordance with grant agreements, FCC will maintain its copyright over grant and contract-funded materials, in accordance with stipulations concerning dissemination, reuse, and adaptation of those materials under the designated Creative Commons license. For more information about CC Licenses see the Copyright Resource Guide. - Dispute Resolution
Should a dispute about the application of this Policy and Procedures arise between the Creator(s) and the College, resolution is first pursued using the Complaint Policy and Procedures for Employees.
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