I’m sure that we’ve all had student who, when wanting a picture simply hop onto Google Images and do a search. Easy way to do it, but certainly not the quickest, easiest, safest or perhaps the most legal. So, on offer here are five sites that provide free, quality images that you can use with your students – without the fear of legal ramifications or content worries. The list below is in no particular order.
1. Sunipix (www.sunipix.com)

Sunipix is a picture library for students, teachers, architects, website designers, advertising and marketing executives, civil engineers, business executives, travel agents, government agencies, and media/Information Technology professionals. Sunipix provides royalty free photographs (100 DPI) free of charge for personal and business needs.
2. Public Domain Pictures (www.publicdomainpictures.net)

Pictures are organised into an easy to navigate menu. There is an option for an account, but this is not necessary for downloading the images.
PublicDomainPictures.net is a repository for free public domain photos. You can upload your own pictures and share your work with others.
If you intend to use an image you find here for commercial use, please be aware that no model release was obtained and pictures featuring products or property should be used with care.
The pictures are free for you to use and you should feel good about doing so.
3. Every Stock Photo (www.everystockphoto.com)

This is probably the most ‘modern’ looking of photo sites with tag clouds, a window for your current collection, feature searches, blog, and a forum. If you’re thinking of using photo sites with students be aware of having a ‘safe search’. Every Stock Photo recently posted;
We are a search engine for free photos. These come from many sources and are license-specific. You can view a photo’s license by clicking on the license icon, below and left of photos. Membership is free, without advertising, and allows you to rate, tag, collect and comment on photos.
Our default sorting algorithm favors popularity heavily. As a result, over the last year, salacious photos, across all searches, have been floating up. Obviously popular with some, they are offensive to others! To combat this, we introduced a “safe search” mode, which filtered out photos marked as NSFW. This was off by default. Due to increasing feedback from users, we are changing safe search to default to ON. you can turn it OFF via the advanced search, or in your user search preferences. We are also making sure that safe search mode applies across all the website features.
As a teacher searching for images to use, this probably would be my favoured site, however I would exercise caution when allowing students access.
4. Images For Education (www.imagesforeducation.org.uk)

This site is specifically for education and has a focus on history. The nice thing is that this site has both moving and still images.
An unrivalled online image library, comprising over 500 hours of film and 56,000 photos, will be available free of charge for at least 25 years to UK higher and further education institutions from Summer 2010.
Following £2.5 million in funding from JISC and a competitive procurement process during the first months of 2009, eleven high-quality image collections have been licensed by JISC Collections as part of the Digital Images for Education initiative.
The key emphasis is on bringing to life “Our History” – in particular, film and digital images that capture local history, UK history and world history during the last 25 years.
5. PD Photo (www.pdphoto.org)

This site has some wonderful images. The web author Jon has a love for photography and has kindly put his images onto the web for the bigger world.
PDPhoto.org is a repository for free public domain photos. Unless something is clearly marked as being copyrighted, you can assume it is free to use. But if you intend to use an image you find here for commercial use, please be aware that standards for such use are higher. Specifically, you should assume no model release was obtained. And pictures featuring products or property should be used with care. The photos are here to be used, but I don’t want you to get either of us in trouble over it.
Some Extra Sites
As a nice little bonus here’s five other places that you can look too.
- http://www.freeimages.com/
- http://www.burningwell.org/
- http://www.openphoto.net/
- http://www.pixelperfectdigital.com/free_stock_photos/
- http://www.sxc.hu/ – free and paid
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