If students are using the search for images feature with Jamboard it defaults to Google image search for images that are not restricted by copyright.

Jamboard doesn't facilitate the unfair use of content any more than any other tool where students can upload and use content. It is a powerful collaboration tool and has built-in assistive features when using the app on a touch screen device.

photo
Jacquelyn Whiting (she/her)
Innovation & Technology Specialist

Educator | Author | @MsJWhiting


On Sun, Jul 19, 2020 at 9:18 AM Susan Smey <suesmey@hotmail.com> wrote:
I’m wondering if teachers in your district began using Jamboard in the spring. I’m concerned about how easy it is to “steal” images from the internet and add them to a Jamboard product. Have any districts prohibited the use of Jamboard for this reason?  If not, how worried are you that students won’t be citing their sources?

Sent from my iPhone
_______________________________________________
CASL-L mailing list
CASL-L@mylist.net
https://mylist.net/listinfo/casl-l