ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURE 3715: Intellectual Property
The following intellectual property procedure shall be interpreted consistent with other
district policies, including but not limited to, the district’s policy on academic freedom
(Board Policy 4030), and federal and state statutes and regulations. This procedure
shall also be interpreted consistent with all collective bargaining agreements.
Definitions
For the purposes of this procedure, the following definitions apply to the following words
or phrases:
“Administrative activity” means the execution of the district’s management or
administrative functions such as preparing budgets, policies, contracts, personnel
management, printing course materials and catalogues, maintenance of computer data,
long-range planning, and keeping inventories of equipment. Teaching and academic
endeavors are not administrative activities.
“Author” or “creator” means an individual who alone or as part of a group of other
creators invent, author, discover, or otherwise create intellectual property.
“District resources” means all tangible resources including buildings, equipment,
facilities, computers, software, personnel, and funding.
“Course materials” are materials prepared for use in teaching, fixed or unfixed, in any
form, including but not limited to, digital, print, audio, visual, or any combination thereof.
Course materials include, but are not limited to, lectures, lecture notes, and materials,
syllabi, study guides, bibliographies, visual aids, images, diagrams, multimedia
presentations, Web-ready content, and educational software.
“Course syllabus” means a document that includes information about the outline,
standards for student evaluation, and additional information that reflects the academic
work of the faculty member.
“Digital-encoded work” means a work (on a bit-sequence) that can be stored on
computer-readable media, manipulated by computers, and transmitted through data
networks.
MiraCosta Community College District Page 1 of 14
Effective Date: 4/6/10
CCLC Update: #8, 2/05
Periodic Review:
References: 17 United States Code, §§101 et seq.
35 United States Code, §§101 et seq.
37 Code of Federal Regulations, §§ 1.1 et seq.
Steering: VPI/VPHR / N/A
“Employee” means an individual employed by the district and shall include full-time and
associate faculty, classified staff, student employees, appointed personnel, persons with
"no-salary" appointments, and academic professionals who develop intellectual property
using district resources, unless there is an agreement providing otherwise.
“Intellectual property” means works, products, processes, tangible-research property,
copyrightable subject matter, works of art, trade secrets, know-how, inventions, and
other creations the ownership of which are recognized and protected from unauthorized
exploitation by law. Examples of intellectual property include scholarly, artistic, and
instructional materials.
“Student” means an individual who was or is enrolled in a class or program at the district
at the time the intellectual property was created.
“Student employee” means a student who is paid by the district and may include
students participating in a work-study program or who receive stipends while they are
acting within the scope of their employment at the district at the time the intellectual
property was created.
“Substantial use of district resources” means use of district resources beyond the
normal professional, technology, and technical support generally provided by the district
and extended to an individual or individuals for development of a product, project, or
program. The use of district resources must be important and instrumental to the
creation of the intellectual property. The following do not constitute substantial use of
the district’s resources: (1) incidental use of district resources and/or (2) use of district
resources commonly available to district employees. A substantial use of the district’s
resources may be implicated in situations where the district provides the creator with a
reduced workload at full compensation for the purpose of creating the item.
Work” means an “original work of authorship fixed in a tangible medium" as used in the
Copyright Act.
Ownership of Intellectual Property. The ownership rights to a creation at the district
shall be determined generally as set forth below, unless ownership is modified by an
agreement.
Employee Intellectual-Property Rights
A district employee who is the creator of an academic work in their field of expertise
owns the copyright in that work. Academic works include textbooks, lecture notes and
other course materials, literary works, artistic works, musical works, architectural works,
and software produced with no more than nominal or incidental use of the district’s
resources. Academic works described in this paragraph are owned by the employee,
even though such works may have been developed within the employee’s scope of
employment.
The official course outline of records is the property of the college regardless of
authorship. The individual expressions in the syllabus are the intellectual property of the
author.
One electronic copy of each syllabus will be requested from faculty by the Office of
Instruction for the following purposes:
A. Providing syllabi to students who request them for individual course articulation
when the faculty member is unavailable.
B. Providing syllabi to authors of an accreditation self-study to demonstrate
inclusion of Student Learning Outcomes and language that demonstrates the
college's meeting of other accreditation standards and sub-standards.
C. Providing syllabi to visiting accreditation team members to demonstrate meeting
of accreditation standards and sub-standards.
This particular electronic copy will only be used for the purposes outlined above.
However, paper or electronic copies of syllabi may be included in materials required for
tenure-review packets (see Tenure Candidate Handbook) and may be requested by
department chairs and discipline leads as part of the evaluation of associate faculty
members (see Associate Faculty Handbook). They may also be requested by
department chairs and Academic Senate presidents for the purposes of evaluating
student requests for grade changes (see Board Policy/Administrative Procedure 4231,
Grade Changes), and by department chairs, deans, and members of the Grievance
Hearing Committee for the purposes of settling a student grievance (see Administrative
Procedure 5530, Student Rights and Grievances). In these cases, the requestor must
obtain the syllabus via specific request to its author or from the student in support of
their grievance or request for change of grade.
Intellectual property unrelated to an individual's employment responsibilities at the
district and that is developed on an individual's own time and without the district’s
support or use of district facilities is the exclusive property of the creator, and the district
has no interest in any such property and holds no claim to any profits resulting from
such intellectual property.
District Intellectual-Property Rights
The district owns all other intellectual property, including, but not limited to, patentable
inventions, such as computer software, created by its employees under the following
circumstances:
A. If intellectual property is created through the district’s administrative activities by
an employee working within their scope of employment.
B. If intellectual property is created by an employee executing a duty or specific
assignment designated by the district.
C. If intellectual property is created through the substantial use of district resources.
D. If intellectual property is commissioned by the district pursuant to a signed
contract.
E. If intellectual property is produced within one of the nine categories of works
considered works-for-hire under copyright law pursuant to a written contract.
F. If intellectual property is produced from research specifically supported by state
or federal funds or third-party sponsorship obtained through the district.
Where circumstances give rise to district intellectual-property rights as described above,
the creator of the potential intellectual property will promptly disclose the intellectual
property to the district. The district and the creator may enter into a written agreement
whereby the creator executes documents assigning intellectual property rights to the
district.
The superintendent/president may waive the district’s interests in its intellectual property
by executing a written waiver.
Student Intellectual-Property Rights
District students who create a work are owners of and have intellectual-property rights
in that work. District students own the intellectual property rights in the following works
created while they are students at the district: (1) intellectual property created to meet
course requirements using college or district resources, and (2) intellectual property
created using resources available to the public. Intellectual property works created by
students while acting as district employees shall be governed under provisions for
employees.
When an instructor makes use of software that incorporates student works into its
database, as is common with plagiarism-prevention software, the use should be
governed by the following guidelines:
A. Student work may not be submitted to plagiarism-prevention software or other
software that incorporates a students work into its database without the student's
knowledge.
B. Students should be informed in the syllabus that such software is used in the
course and that the software incorporates any student work submitted into its
database.
C. Students should be given alternatives, such as requiring students who do not
submit their work to plagiarism-prevention software, to document their references
using an annotated bibliography and/or photocopies of the first page of all
sources used and/or to write a brief paper describing their research
methodologies.
Modification of Ownership Rights
The general provisions for ownership of intellectual property rights set forth previously
may be modified by the parties as follows:
Sabbatical Works
Generally, intellectual property created by district employees during a sabbatical is
defined as an academic work. However, where a work to be created as part of an
approved sabbatical plan requires resources beyond those normally provided to other
employees during a sabbatical (substantial use of district resources), the parties may
enter into a written agreement to define the district and employee’s intellectual property
rights in the sabbatical work.
Assignment of Rights
When the conditions outlined in the sections on employee intellectual-property rights or
student intellectual-property rights are met, ownership will reside with the employee or
student responsible for creating the intellectual property. In these circumstances, the
creator may pursue intellectual-property protection, marketing, and licensing activities
without involving the district. If such a decision is made, the creator is entitled to all
revenues received.
Any person may agree to assign some or all of his or her intellectual-property rights to
the district. In the event the creator offers to share or assign intellectual-property rights
in the creation to the district, the district may support and finance application for
intellectual-property protection (trademark, patent, or copyright) or it may enter into an
agreement for other exploitation of the work, including management, development, and
commercialization of the property under terms and conditions as may be agreeable to
the parties. After evaluating the creator's offer, the district may or may not decide to
become involved in a joint-investment agreement. A negative response from the district
will be communicated in writing to the creator. An affirmative response from the district
will be summarized as an offer to enter into a written contract. If the creator accepts the
district's proposed contract, any revenues received from commercialization of the
intellectual property will be distributed as defined in the contract.
Sponsorship Agreements
A sponsored work is a work first produced by or through the district in the performance
of a written agreement between the district and a sponsor. Sponsored works generally
include interim and final technical reports, software, and other works first created in the
performance of a sponsored agreement. Sponsored works do not include journal
articles, lectures, books, or other copyrighted works created through independent
academic effort and based on the findings of the sponsored project, unless the
sponsored agreement states otherwise. Ownership of copyrights to sponsored works
shall be with the district unless the sponsored agreement states otherwise. Where a
sponsorship agreement does not define ownership of the intellectual property,
ownership shall be determined under applicable law. Any sponsorship agreement that
provides for ownership of the work by one other than the district generally shall provide
the district with a nonexclusive, worldwide license to use and reproduce the copyrighted
work for education and research purposes.
Collaboration/Partnership Agreements
The district may participate in projects with persons/organizations that result in the
creation of intellectual property. Ownership rights of such intellectual property will be
defined by the collaboration/partnership agreement or shall be determined under
applicable law.
Special Commission
Intellectual property rights to a work specially ordered or commissioned by the district
from a faculty member, professional staff member, other district employee, or other
individual or entity, and identified by the district as a specially commissioned work at the
time the work was commissioned, shall belong to the district. The district and the
employee shall enter into a written agreement for creation of the specially
commissioned work.
Use of Substantial District Resources
In the event the district provides substantial resources to an employee for creation of a
work and the work was not created under an agreement (such as a sponsorship
agreement, individual agreement, or special commission), the district and the creator
shall own the intellectual-property rights jointly in proportion to the respective
contributions made.
Encoded Works/Software for Administrative Activities
The district may hire an individual or entity to develop software or other encoded works
to be used in the district’s administrative activities. The district shall maintain ownership
of the intellectual property rights in such encoded works. Similarly, the district shall have
ownership of the intellectual-property rights in encoded works created by an employee,
even where the work was created out of the employee’s own initiative if the work is
related to the employee's job responsibilities. For example, if an employee in the
student records office creates a software program on their own initiative that will
organize student records, such work is related to the employee’s job duties and will
belong to the district. Where an employee creates a program that does not relate to
their job duties and that program was created on the employee’s own time, the work
belongs to the employee.
Collective-Bargaining Agreement
In the event the provisions of these procedures and the provisions of any operative
collective-bargaining agreement conflict, the collective-bargaining agreement shall take
precedence.
Jointly Created Works
Ownership of jointly created works shall be determined by separately assessing which
of the above categories applies to each creator, respectively. Rights between joint
owners of a copyright shall be determined pursuant to copyright law.
Work Acquired by Assignment or Will
The district may acquire copyrights by assignment or will pursuant to the terms of a
written agreement or testament. The terms of such agreements should be consistent
with district policies and these procedures.
Materials Implicating Third Party Rights
District employees and students must comply with district policies and state and federal
laws, including copyright and privacy laws, in creating works. District employees and
students must obtain all required licenses, consents, and releases necessary to avoid
infringing the rights of third parties. District employees and students with questions or
concerns regarding third-party rights should direct all inquiries to the Vice President,
Instructional Services.
Intellectual-Property Coordinator
The Vice President, Instructional Services, shall be the district’s intellectual-property
coordinator. The coordinator shall administer this procedure and will implement the
district’s intellectual property policy. The coordinator will also monitor the development
and use of the district’s intellectual property. Any questions relating to the applicability of
the district's intellectual property or this procedure may be directed and answered by the
intellectual-property coordinator.
Preservation of Intellectual-Property Rights
Protection of Rights: The district shall undertake such efforts as it deems necessary to
preserve its rights in original works for which the district is the sole or joint owner of
intellectual property rights. The district may apply for a patent, for trademark
registration, for copyright registration, or for other protection available by law on any
new work in which it maintains intellectual-property rights.
Payment of Costs: The district may pay some or all costs required for obtaining a
patent, trademark, copyright, or other classification on original works for which it
exclusively owns intellectual-property rights. If the district has intellectual-property rights
in a jointly owned work, the district may enter into an agreement with the joint owners
concerning payment of such costs.
Commercialization of Intellectual Property
Right of Commercialization: The district may commercialize its intellectual property
using its resources or it may enter into agreements with others to commercialize the
work as authorized by law.
Distribution of Proceeds: An employee who creates a work and retains an intellectual
property interest in such work in which the district maintains intellectual-property rights
is entitled to share in royalties, licenses, and any other payments from
commercialization of the work in accordance with applicable agreements and applicable
laws. Any expenses incurred by the district in protecting and promoting the work,
including costs incurred in seeking patent or copyright protection and reasonable costs
of marketing the work, shall be paid according to the prior agreement of the employee
and the district.
Intellectual Property Account: Proceeds from intellectual property are general income to
the district and should be disposed of as directed by the Board of Trustees through the
budget-and-expenditure-approval process.
Profits from Required Course Materials
Faculty members should be aware that the Education Code and the California Code of
Regulations provide that when students are required to provide or purchase
instructional and other materials, such materials must be of a continuing value to the
student outside of the classroom setting and should not be solely or exclusively
available within the district. This would include course textbooks, packs, software, and
other instructional materials (Education Code §76365 and 5 California Code of
Regulations, §§59400, et seq.). In addition, profiting by the instructor-of-record from
sales of required course materials may also be in violation of district’s policy and
institutional code of ethics, which requires that faculty members avoid conflict of
interests between their contractual obligations to the district and private business or
personal commitments, including soliciting and selling services or products during the
course of their regular work at the college (Administrative Procedure 3050). In
accordance with district policy, no instructor will profit from the purchase of required or
suggested materials for courses for which he or she is the instructor-of-record. Materials
authored by the instructor of record will be provided at cost, or the instructor will be
responsible for demonstrating to the Vice President, Instructional Services, that
profits were donated to the MiraCosta College Foundation or other nonprofit entity.
Notification
The intellectual property coordinator shall provide a copy of these intellectual-property
procedures to persons upon request. The district shall arrange training on a periodic
basis for faculty, staff, and/or other persons who are covered by this intellectual-
property procedure.
Form A: Work Made For Hire Agreement
Course Materials
This agreement made the [date] day of [month], 20[year], by and between [name of author] ("Author," and
if there is more than one author then all of them collectively) and [name of District] ("District").
The author and the district agree as follows:
1. Title and Copyright Assignment
(a) Author and District intend this to be a contract for services and each considers the products and
results of the services to be rendered by Author hereunder (the "Work") to be a work made for hire.
Author acknowledges and agrees that the Work (and all rights therein, including, without limitation,
copyright) belongs to and shall be the sole and exclusive property of District.
(b) If for any reason the Work would not be considered a work made for hire under applicable law, Author
does hereby sell, assign, and transfer to District, its successors and assigns, the entire right, title and
interest in and to the copyright in the Work and any registrations and copyright applications relating
thereto and any renewals and extensions thereof, and in and to all works based upon, derived from, or
incorporating the Work, and in an to all income, royalties, damages, claims and payments now or
hereafter due or payable with respect thereto, and in and to all causes of action, either in law or in equity
for past, present, or future infringement based on the copyrights, and in and to all rights corresponding to
the foregoing throughout the world.
(c) If the Work is one to which the provisions of 17 U.S.C. §106A apply, the Author hereby waives and
appoints District to assert on the Author's behalf the Author's moral rights or any equivalent rights
regarding the form or extent of any alteration to the Work (including, without limitation, removal or
destruction) or the making of any derivative works based on the Work, including, without limitation,
photographs, drawings or other visual reproductions or the Work, in any medium, for District purposes.
(d) Author agrees to execute all papers and to perform such other proper acts as District may deem
necessary to secure for District or its designee the rights herein assigned.
2. Delivery of the Work
(a) The Author will deliver to the District on or before [date] the completed Work (with all illustrations,
charts, graphs, and other material, including syllabi, handouts, reference lists, etc., in the medium
mutually agreed upon for the Work) in form and content satisfactory to the District.
(b) If the Author fails to deliver the Work on time, the District will have the right to terminate this
agreement and to recover from the Author any sums advanced in connection with the Work. Upon such
termination, the Author may not have the Work published elsewhere until such advances have been
repaid.
3. Quoted Material
With the exception of short excerpts from others' works, which constitute fair use, the Work will contain
no material from other copyrighted works without a written consent of the copyright holder. The Author will
obtain such consents at their own expense after consultation with the District and will file them with the
District at the time the Work is delivered. Any obligations associated with permissions will be the
responsibility of the Author.
4. Author's Warranty
The Author warrants that they are the sole owner of the Work and have full power and authority to make
this agreement; that the Work does not infringe any copyright, violate any property rights, or contain any
scandalous, libelous, or unlawful matter. The Author will defend, indemnify, and hold harmless the District
and/or its licensees against all claims, suits, costs, damages, and expenses that the District and/or its
licensees may sustain by reason of any scandalous, libelous, or unlawful matter contained or alleged to
be contained in the Work or any infringement or violation by the Work of any copyright or property right;
and until such claim or suit has been settled or withdrawn, the District may withhold any sums due the
Author under this agreement.
5. Consideration
In consideration for delivery of the Work in accordance with the provisions of this Agreement, District shall
pay Author [amount].
6. Revisions
[Choose one paragraph.]
The Author shall retain the right to revise the Work [insert time, such as at one year intervals] during the
term of this agreement in accordance with academic standards. The Author further agrees to update the
Work within [Insert length of time, such as 90] days upon the receipt of a written request from the District.
The provisions of this agreement shall apply to each revision of the Work by the Author as though that
revision were the Work being published for the first time under this agreement. In the event that the
Author is unable or unwilling to provide a revision within [Insert length of time, such as 90] days after the
District has requested it, or should the Author be deceased, the District may have the revision made and
charge the cost against sums due the Author under Section 5 above, if any, and may display, in the
revised Work and in advertising, the name of the person or persons who perform the revision.
or
This paragraph has been deleted because the Author's contribution is not a work expressing academic
expertise requiring periodic review and revision.
7. Term and Termination
(a) This agreement shall remain in effect for [insert length of time, such as three (3)] years unless
terminated earlier in accordance with this Section 7.
(b) In the event that either party shall be in default of its material obligations under this agreement and
shall fail to remedy such default within [Insert length of time, such as sixty] days after receipt of written
notice thereof, this agreement shall terminate upon expiration of the [Insert length of time, such as sixty]
day period.
(c) Upon the expiration of the term of this agreement, the parties may agree to renew this agreement for
an additional [Insert length of time, such as three] year term, upon the same terms and conditions as set
forth herein.
8. Options/Contracts with Third Parties
Nothing contained in Section 7 shall affect any license or other grant of rights, options, or agreements
made with third parties prior to the termination date or the rights of the District in the income resulting from
such agreements.
9. Amendments
The written provisions contained in this agreement constitute the sole and entire agreement made
between the Author and the District concerning this Work, and any amendments to this agreement shall
not be valid unless made in writing and signed by both parties.
10. Construction, Binding Effect, and Assignment
This agreement shall be construed and interpreted according to the laws of the State of California and
shall be binding upon the parties hereto, their heirs, successors, assigns, and personal representatives;
and references to the Author and to the District shall include their heirs, successors, assigns, and
personal representatives.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have duly executed this agreement as of the date first written
above.
[Insert signature lines for author and district designee]
Form B: Contract under which Employee Keeps Copyright of the Work and
Gives District a License to Use/Exploit Work
Course Materials
This Agreement made the [date] day of [month], 20[year], by and between [name of author] ("Author," and
if there is more than one author then all of them collectively) and [name of District] ("District").
Recitals
The Author will be the sole contributor of copyrightable expression to the educational course materials
anticipated to result from this project. The District will be contributing significant kinds and/or amounts of
District resources. The Parties recognize that under law, the District is obligated to obtain appropriate
consideration for the transfer of state resources. In furtherance of their mutual objectives, the Parties
agree to allocate certain of their rights and responsibilities as set forth in this agreement.
The author and the District agree as follows:
1. Rights Granted
[Choose one of the following paragraphs.]
Nonprofit Educational Uses. The Author hereby grants to the District for the full term of this agreement the
nonexclusive right to copy, distribute, display, perform, transmit, and publish for nonprofit educational
purposes the educational course materials entitled: [name of work] (hereinafter called "Work").
or
Nonexclusive Commercial License. The Author hereby grants to the District for the full term of this
agreement the nonexclusive right to copy, distribute, display, perform, transmit, publish and sell
throughout the world the educational course materials entitled: [name of work] (hereinafter called "Work").
This license grant also includes, without limitation, the rights to the Work listed in Paragraph 8 below, with
authority to license those rights in all countries and in all languages.
or
Exclusive Commercial License. The Author hereby grants to the District for the full term of this agreement
the exclusive right to copy, distribute, display, perform, transmit, publish and sell throughout the world the
educational course materials entitled: [name of work] (hereinafter called "Work"). This license grant also
includes, without limitation, the rights to the Work listed in Paragraph 8 below, with authority to license
those rights in all countries and in all languages.
2. Delivery of the Work
(a) The Author will prepare and deliver to the District on or before [date] the completed Work (with all
illustrations, charts, graphs, and other material, including syllabi, handouts, reference lists, etc., in the
medium mutually agreed upon for the Work) in form and content satisfactory to the District.
(b) If the Author fails to deliver the Work on time, the District will have the right to terminate this
agreement and to recover from the Author any sums or other resources advanced in connection with the
Work. Upon such termination, the Author may not have the Work published elsewhere until such
advances have been repaid.
3. Quoted Material
With the exception of short excerpts from others' works, which constitute fair use, the Work will contain no
material from other copyrighted works without a written consent of the copyright holder. The Author will
obtain such consents at their own expense after consultation with the District and will file them with the
District at the time the Work is delivered. Any obligations associated with permissions will be the
responsibility of the Author.
4. Publication of the Work
The Work shall be distributed, transmitted or published by the [District/Author] as soon as circumstances
permit after receipt, at its own expense, in such manner as the [District/Author] shall deem appropriate.
5. Copyright Registration
The Author authorizes the District to register copyright in the Work in the Author's name in the United
States and elsewhere as the District may elect.
6. Author's Warranty
(a) The Author warrants that they are the sole owner of the Work and have full power and authority to
make this agreement; that they have made a good faith effort to follow the District’s Intellectual Property
Policy and Procedures and that the Work does not infringe any copyright, violate any property rights, or
contain any scandalous, libelous, or unlawful matter.
(b) To the extent that an act of the Author that results in a claim of copyright infringement was authorized
by the District’s Intellectual Property Policy and Procedures, in accordance with that Policy and to the
extent authorized by the Constitution and laws of the State of California, the District, will defend,
indemnify and hold harmless the Author against all claims, suits, costs, damages and expenses that the
Author may sustain by reason of such infringement or violation by the Work of any copyright.
(c) In all other cases, the Author will defend, indemnify, and hold harmless the District and/or its licensees
against all claims, suits, costs, damages, and expenses that the District and/or its licensees may sustain
by reason of any scandalous, libelous, or unlawful matter contained or alleged to be contained in the
Work or any infringement or violation by the Work of any copyright or property right; and until such claim
or suit has been settled or withdrawn, the District may withhold any sums due the Author under this
agreement.
7. Consideration
(a) District will contribute the following resources to the creation of the Work:
[List: Materials, Hardware, Software, Technical Assistance, Other Assistance, Videotaping, Programming,
Teaching Load Credit, or Funding.]
[Choose one of the following paragraphs.]
(b) The parties shall share in any revenues from the commercialization of the Work as follows: District will
first recover its resource contribution in the amount of $___, then the Parties shall share profits 50 percent
to the District and 50 percent to all Authors (to be shared evenly among the Authors if more than
or
(b) The parties shall share in any revenues from the commercialization of the Work as follows: The
Parties shall share profits 50 percent to the District and 50 percent to all Authors (to be shared evenly
among the Authors if more than one.)
or
(b) The Parties do not anticipate commercial exploitation of the Work and so have not addressed District's
recovery of its contribution or allocated royalty percentages to either Party.
8. Subsidiary Rights
[Choose the paragraph below that corresponds to the paragraph chosen for Section 1.]
Nonprofit Educational Uses. The District has been granted a limited right to use the Work for nonprofit
educational purposes only and therefore does not need subsidiary rights and all such rights are retained
by the Author.
or
Nonexclusive Commercial License. The District shall have the right to license, sell, or otherwise dispose
of the following rights in the Work: Publication or sale by book clubs; reprint rights; foreign rights;
translation rights; publication in anthologies, compilations, digests, condensations; first and second serial
rights (in one or more installments); dramatic, motion picture, and television rights; broadcast by radio;
recordings; electronic, mechanical, and visual reproduction; computer programs; microprint, microfiche,
and microfilm editions; syndication rights; permission rights (quotations, excerpts, illustrations, etc.); any
other rights to the Work not specifically enumerated; and otherwise utilize the Work and material based
on the Work.
or
Exclusive Commercial License. The District shall have the sole right to license, sell, or otherwise dispose
of the following rights in the Work: Publication or sale by book clubs; reprint rights; foreign rights;
translation rights; publication in anthologies, compilations, digests, condensations; first and second serial
rights (in one or more installments); dramatic, motion picture, and television rights; broadcast by radio;
recordings; electronic, mechanical, and visual reproduction; computer programs; microprint, microfiche,
and microfilm editions; syndication rights; permission rights (quotations, excerpts, illustrations, etc.); any
other rights to the Work not specifically enumerated; and otherwise utilize the Work and material based
on the Work.
9. Revisions
The Author shall retain the right to revise the Work [at one year intervals] during the term of this
agreement in accordance with academic standards. The Author further agrees to update the Work within
ninety (90) days upon the receipt of a written request from the District. The provisions of this agreement
shall apply to each revision of the Work by the Author as though that revision were the Work being
published for the first time under this agreement. In the event that the Author is unable or unwilling to
provide a revision within ninety (90) days after the District has requested it, or should the Author be
deceased, the District may have the revision made and charge the cost against the Author's royalties and
may display, in the revised Work and in advertising, the name of the person or persons who perform the
revision.
10. Term and Termination
[Choose this first set of paragraphs if the District was granted an Exclusive Commercial License in
Section 1.]
(a) This agreement shall remain in effect for [insert length of time, such as three (3)] years unless
terminated earlier in accordance with this Section 10. Upon expiration of the term and any renewal term[s]
agreed upon pursuant to Section 10(d), or upon earlier termination in accordance with Sections 10(b), or
(b) the rights granted in the Work shall revert to the Author, subject to retention by the District of the
nonexclusive, perpetual right and license to use the Work for internal nonprofit educational purposes and
to use the structure and organization of the Work as a guide for the creation of a new course.
(c) In the event that either party shall be in default of its material obligations under this agreement and
shall fail to remedy such default within [Insert length of time, such as sixty] days after receipt of written
notice thereof, this agreement shall terminate upon expiration of the [Insert length of time, such as sixty]
day period.
(d) The Work shall be considered to be "in use" if it is made available by District for distribution or
transmission, offered for sale or licensed for distribution, transmission or sale during the term of this
agreement. If the District fails to keep the Work in use and the Author makes a written request of the
District to terminate this agreement, the District shall notify the Author in writing of the District's decision in
the matter within [Insert length of time, such as sixty] days after receipt of the written request. If the
District elects to keep the Work in use, it shall have [Insert length of time, such as six] months thereafter
to comply. If the District elects not to keep the Work in use or fails to comply with the [Insert length of
time, such as six] months deadline (unless the failure is due to circumstances beyond its control), then
this agreement shall terminate.
(e) Upon the expiration of the term of this agreement, the parties may agree to renew this agreement for
an additional [insert length of time, such as three (3)] year term, upon the same terms and conditions as
set forth herein.
[Choose this second set of paragraphs if the District has either a Nonprofit Educational Use License or a
Nonexclusive Commercial License in Section 1.]
(a) This Agreement shall remain in effect for [insert length of time, such as three (3)] year(s) unless
terminated earlier in accordance with this Section 10. Upon expiration of the term and any renewal
term(s) agreed upon pursuant to Section 10(c), or upon earlier termination in accordance with Section
10(b), the rights granted in the Work shall revert to the Author, subject to retention by the District of the
nonexclusive, perpetual right, and license to use the Work for internal nonprofit educational purposes and
to use the structure and organization of the Work as a guide for the creation of a new course.
(b) In the event that either Party shall be in default of its material obligations under this Agreement and
shall fail to remedy such default within sixty (60) days after receipt of written notice thereof, this
Agreement shall terminate upon expiration of the [Insert length of time, such as sixty] day period.
(c) Upon the expiration of the term of this Agreement, the parties may agree to renew this Agreement for
an additional [insert length of time, such as three] year term, upon the same terms and conditions as set
forth herein.
11. Options/Contracts with Third Parties
Nothing contained in Section 10 shall affect any license or other grant of rights, options, or agreements
made with third parties prior to the termination date or the rights of the District in the income resulting from
such agreements.
12. Amendments
The written provisions contained in this agreement constitute the sole and entire agreement made
between the Author and the District concerning this Work, and any amendments to this agreement shall
not be valid unless made in writing and signed by both parties.
13. Construction, Binding Effect, and Assignment
This agreement shall be construed and interpreted according to the laws of the State of California and
shall be binding upon the parties hereto, their heirs, successors, assigns, and personal representatives;
and references to the Author and to the District shall include their heirs, successors, assigns, and
personal representatives.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have duly executed this agreement as of the date first written
above.
[Insert signature lines for author and district designee]