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Personal works are owned by the creator of the work.
Personal
works are works "created by a(n) . . . student … 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." (Board Policy 3.26, Part 4,
Subpart A.4)
"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 for those students employed by MnSCU or its institutions,
is that the works must unquestionably be created outside the
scope of employment if they are to be considered "personal
works." For example, the teaching assistant in the music department
who writes an article for "Rolling Stone" magazine outside
of work hours; the computer lab student employee who helps
her church's pre-school instructor prepare a powerpoint presentation
for parents; and the student food service worker who writes
recipes for a cookbook for college students living on a shoe
string 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 student employees to some
degree, but they are still personal works created outside
the scope of employment.
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