The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Children must learn to spot ‘fake news’, says expert

Schools should be tasked with ensuring children remain tolerant to different views and recognise the truth

- Alison kershaw

Children should be taught in schools how to recognise “fake news”, a leading internatio­nal education expert has said.

In a modern digital age, schools need to teach pupils how to think critically and analyse what they read on social media and news sites, according to Andreas Schleicher, the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t (OECD) director of education and skills.

He also suggested that social media creates an “echo-chamber” in which users only hear from viewpoints similar to their own, and argued that schools have a role to play in making sure that young people have a chance to debate different views and opinions.

Mr Schleicher’s comments come ahead of the annual Global Education and Skills Forum in Dubai, where he will put forward the OECD’s plans to test young people’s attitudes to global issues and different cultures, their analytical and critical skills and abilities to interact with others.

These “global competenci­es” are becoming increasing­ly important, said Mr Schleicher.

“In the past, when you needed informatio­n, you went to an encyclopae­dia, you looked it up, and you could trust that informatio­n to be true,” he added.

He added that today, anyone using social media or even news sites has to be able to assess, evaluate and reflect on the informatio­n they are given.

“Distinguis­hing what is true from what is not true is a critical skill today,” he said.

“Exposing fake news, even being aware that there is something like fake news, that there is something that is written that is not necessaril­y true, that you have to question, think critically. That is very important.

“Schools can do a lot to equip students with the kind of cognitive ability to access and analyse meaning, culture, practice, things like this,” he said.

He added that it is not a matter of schools teaching a new subject, but building these skills into all lessons, from science to history.

Mr Schleicher also suggested that social media can reinforce one single viewpoint.

“Social media is designed to create an echo chamber. We are likely to talk with people who are like us. Who think similarly to us.

“And that’s precisely, almost the antithesis, to global competency.”

One example is young people from Europe going to fight for Islamic State, turning “the multi-religious, multiethni­c powerhouse­s of the Middle East back to a kind of mono-culture”, Mr Schleicher said.

“That’s really I think an outcome of the thinking that there is only one truth and there’s only one way to live.

“I think that social media can reinforce that. The algorithms underpinni­ng them tend to relate people to people who are similar, rather than creating spaces for people to discuss debate and find common ground.”

The new computer-based “global competenci­es” tests will be taken by 15-year-olds around the world alongside the OECD’s current reading, maths and science assessment­s every three years.

The results of these assessment­s – and the rankings of around 70 countries and economies based on the results – are seen as important by government­s worldwide, including the UK.

The tests are due to be taken next year, with the results published in 2019.

Mr Schleicher said: “This assessment is about the capacity of young people to see the world through different perspectiv­es, appreciate different ideas, be open to different cultures, which is an increasing­ly important dimension in a more interconne­cted world – both economical­ly and socially.”

 ??  ?? Fact or fiction? The boundaries are blurred on the web.
Fact or fiction? The boundaries are blurred on the web.

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