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Personal works are owned by the creator of the work.
Personal
works are works "created by an employee … outside his or her
scope of employment and without the use of college or university
resources other than resources that are available to the public
or resources for which the creator has paid the requisite
fee to utilize."
"Intellectual property rights in personal works belong to
the creator of the work." (Board Policy 3.26, Part 4, Subpart
A.4)
The key here is that the works must unquestionably be created
outside the scope of employment. For example, the American
History professor who writes a work of historical fiction
over the summer; the fine arts instructor who paints watercolors
as gifts for family and friends during non-working hours;
and the music teacher who composes a piece for use by her
church choir have all created personal works. All of the created
works take advantage of the talents of the creators, and possibly
even the creators' experience as faculty members to some degree,
but they are still personal works created outside the scope
of employment.
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