Pearson Education Limited 2007 Photocopiable !!top!! Instant

A: Absolutely not. You own the physical paper; Pearson owns the intellectual content. Creating a derivative work (e.g., remixing the layout) does not void the copyright. You would be infringing on the 2007 terms.

| Instead of photocopying… | Try this… | |--------------------------|------------| | A single worksheet | Assign the page as (if each has a copy) | | Multiple copies for a class | Use Pearson’s eText or MyLab platform (digital access with printing limits) | | Sharing with colleagues | Suggest they buy their own copy — often cheap second-hand | | Making a packet for a workshop | Request permission or use openly licensed resources (e.g., OER Commons) | Pearson Education Limited 2007 Photocopiable

Despite the rise of AI lesson planners and TikTok grammar hacks, there is a fervent demand for PDFs. Why? A: Absolutely not

If you answer to any → Do NOT photocopy. Seek permission or find an alternative. You would be infringing on the 2007 terms