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Course Information
COURSE DAYS, TIME & LOCATION
The class will meet Monday and Wednesdays from 6:00 p.m. until
7:25 p.m. in room 210.
OFFICE & PHONE
My office is Room 743. My telephone number is 312-906-5326 and
my e-mail address is rstaudt@kentlaw.edu.
My computer is always on while I am in the law school and I encourage
you to send messages to me by electronic mail.
TEXT
The casebook for Copyright Law will be Gorman and Ginsburg,
Copyright, Cases and Materials, (7th ed., 2006) published
by Foundation Press with its 2009 Statutory Appendix.
ASSIGNMENTS
Assignments are posted in the Assignments
section of the website. The assignments are tentative and will be adjusted
as we proceed through the material. Review the website regularly.
For the first class please read pages 1-28 in the Gorman and Ginsburg
casebook.
SOME NEW TECHNIQUES FOR LEARNING THE LAW
I plan to take advantage of the technological support that the law
school has available to help us investigate Copyright Law.
- Everyone should have 24 hour access to LEXIS and to the Internet
so that we can read the newest material available. If you need more
training in the use of the computer databases, let me know.
- In addition, I consider e-mail to be an extension of class.
- I have established a web site for our class and posted this document
and other pertinent information. The class web site URL is http://www.kentlaw.edu/faculty/rstaudt/classes/copyright_fall2009/index.htm.
- To expose you to perspectives on teaching and learning other than
my own, I may assign CALI lessons as distance learning exercises to
substitute for an occasional cancelled class.
GRADING, CLASS ATTENDANCE AND CLASS PARTICIPATION
The bulk of the grade in this course will be based on your performance
on the final examination. I have not yet decided on the form of the
final, but I expect that it will be rather traditional. I may change
my mind before December. I will probably allow you to bring your casebook,
other materials and any of your own notes. I will not allow copies of
scarce resources like the major treatises.
To encourage your active involvement during the semester, one-half of
a grade differential may be based on class preparation and participation.
In other words, I will grade the exams and assign a grade. If you are
a conscientious, insightful and effective member of the class, your
grade may be raised from your exam grade to one-half letter grade higher.
If you are frequently unprepared and fail to participate, I will consider
that performance in lowering marginal examination grades by one-half
of a grade. If you are somewhere in between, I may exercise my discretion
to raise your grade by one-half grade depending on the level of your
class performance and the proximity of your exam grade to the nearest
margin.
I consider electronic mail to be an opportunity to extend the class
beyond its usual form and time limits. E-mail to me (which I will forward
to all class members, unless you specifically ask me to keep a message
private) is counted as part of your class participation in the course.
All students must attend at least 75% of the classes in this course.
There are 28 classes. You must be present for at least 21 of these classes.
Any student who does not attend the minimum number of classes has not
met a requirement for getting credit for the course and may not take
the Final Examination. Keep your own count. Sometime after the last
class, but before the hour of the Examination, a list of students who
meet the minimum attendance requirement and are qualified to take the
Final Exam will be posted outside Room 743. This is not an "excuse"
system; a student's reason for nonattendance is not of interest.
A class roster will be passed around each class; your own signature
after your printed name will be the only evidence of your presence that
day, for the entire class. If you leave shortly after the class begins,
your signature should not remain on the class roster indicating you
attended that class.
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