Paparoa Street School

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Copyright

Copyright is a property right that belongs to the creator of an original work. The creator of the original work does not have to use the copyright symbol (©) in order to assert copyright.

The kura complies with the Copyright Act 1994, including sections relating to educational and library use. We assume copyright applies to all works created or used at Paparoa Street School and that we need permission to use an original work. There are times when we do not need permission, including when we use parts of an original work for educational use and fair dealing.

Under the Copyright Act 1994 (s 21.2), the poari matua owns the copyright of any work created by an employee in the course of their employment. This means the poari matua holds the copyright to all original works created by kaimahi in the course of their employment unless otherwise expressly stated in an employment agreement. The kura makes no claim over ākonga work. Ākonga own the copyright of anything they create but ākonga work may be shared for the purpose of reporting to parents.

We access teaching and learning resources by buying originals, copying material in accordance with the Copyright Act 1994, and through copyright licences (including Creative Commons).

Kura community responsibilities

At Paparoa Street School, all members of our kura community have rights and responsibilities in relation to copyright.

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Hei mihi | Acknowledgement

SchoolDocs appreciates the professional advice of Kathryn Dalziel, senior barrister, in the review of this policy.

Release history: Term 2 2024

Topic Number: 1899

Last Modified Date: 27/01/2026 15:39:25

Topic Version: 1

Published Date: 30/01/2026

 

 

Last review

Term 1 2023

Topic type

Core