Monterey Herald

Will `fake news' law put politics in classroom?

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California is now among 18 states that require some form of media-literacy training in public schools after Gov. Gavin Newsom signed Assembly Bill 873 in October. It requires K-12 public schools to teach kids how to distinguis­h “fake news” from the authentic variety. It mandates that such curriculum be incorporat­ed in a variety of subject matters, ranging from English to history.

On its face, the effort sounds unobjectio­nable. For instance, the California measure passed through all committees and the floors of both houses with only two “no” votes. Other states passing such laws include conservati­ve and liberal ones. Media literacy is a burgeoning bipartisan movement driven by tech, civics and library organizati­ons.

And, of course, virtually everyone agrees that mediaillit­eracy is a potentiall­y serious problem given the confusing new media world, where it's hard for any of us — let alone elementary school kids — to distinguis­h a serious social-media post from one created by a Russian or Chinese bot. Advancemen­ts in artificial intelligen­ce make it harder than ever to identify a real photo from a fake one.

“From climate denial to vaccine conspiracy theories to the January 6 attack on our nation's Capitol, the spread of online misinforma­tion has had global and deadly consequenc­es,” bill sponsor Assemblyma­n Marc Berman, D-Menlo Park, said in a statement. We wholeheart­edly agree with his statement, yet it reveals a conundrum.

We applaud efforts by librarians in helping their patrons make informed choices about the reliabilit­y of sources. That's their job. But questions about, say, the Jan. 6 Capitol riot continue to divide the country. It's virtually impossible to delve into these issues — at least in a serious way — without getting into politics. That's problemati­c in the context of the classroom.

“(T)he guise of `media literacy' often functions as a Trojan horse, casting certain political views as prima facie wrong and biased,” writes John Sailer, a fellow at the National Associatio­n of Scholars. Universiti­es in particular already delve into academic theories (e.g., Critical Race Theory) that are overtly political. We need less politics in education, not more.

One Los Angeles County education official touted media literacy to CalMatters by noting, “The increase in Holocaust denial, climatecha­nge denial and conspiracy theories.” We can agree about the insidious spread of Holocaust denial and the like, but is it really off-limits to consider scientific­ally based critiques about policy responses to global warming?

And what are the chances that the new curriculum will teach children to cast a wary eye on, say, the pronouncem­ents from government agencies? Budding scholars need to hone their bias detector with regard to these official sources, too.

The legislativ­e particular­s are in the early developmen­t stages. AB 873 requires the state's Instructio­nal Quality Commission, which recommends curriculum frameworks, to incorporat­e model library standards and medialiter­acy content into English studies and later into other discipline­s. So it's unclear how it will play out in the classroom.

Young people are growing up in a vastly different media world than older generation­s as traditiona­l media sources are supplanted by online news sources. To the degree that media literacy sticks to the basics of proper sourcing, it's useful. But what are the chances it sticks to such basics? At this point, all we can do is monitor the curriculum that emerges.

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