The Daily Telegraph

Children are unable to spot fake news, report finds

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SCHOOLCHIL­DREN lack the critical skills to identify fake news, a parliament­ary inquiry has found.

Only one in 50 school pupils has the critical literacy skills to tell if a news story is real or fake, while nearly half say they are worried about not being able to spot fake news.

The report, by the All-party Parliament­ary Group (APPG) on literacy, found six in 10 teachers believed fake news increased pupils’ anxiety levels.

Lucy Powell, the group chairman, said there was a “dangerous lack in the literacy skills that children and young people require to navigate our digital world and identify fake news”, with the report adding lies in the media drive a culture of “fear and uncertaint­y”.

The APPG spent nine months speaking to pupils, teachers and academics to investigat­e the impact of fake news on children. While 43 per cent of older children got their news from websites and social media, only a quarter (26 per cent) trusted online news sources.

Ms Powell added: “[Lacking the literacy skills to identify fake news] is causing them to mistake false news for fact, become anxious as they believe misleading stories, and risk exposure to malign agendas.

“The digital landscape is evolving at a tremendous rate but the literacy skills children need to thrive in this world are not keeping pace.”

Jonathan Douglas, the director of the National Literacy Trust, said: “The way young people experience news is changing rapidly... If we don’t take urgent action to bring the teaching of critical literacy skills into the 21st century and to engage children actively with news, we risk damaging young people’s democratic futures, along with the well-being of an entire generation.”

The report – called Fake News and Critical Literacy – was compiled after surveying 388 primary school pupils, 1,832 secondary students and 414 teachers, holding group discussion­s with pupils and teachers and inviting written evidence from experts.

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