The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Digital literacy: Can the republic ‘survive an algorithm’?

- By David Klepper And Manuel Valdes

Shawn Lee, a high school social studies teacher in Seattle, wants to see lessons on the internet akin to a kind of 21st century driver’s education, an essential for modern life.

Lee has tried to bring that kind of education into his classroom, with lessons about the need to doublechec­k online sources, to diversify newsfeeds and to bring critical thinking to the web. He’s also created an organizati­on for other teachers to share resources.

“This technology is so new that no one taught us how to use it,” Lee said. “People are like, ‘There’s nothing we can do,’ and they throw their hands in the air. I disagree with that. I would like to think the republic can survive an algorithm.”

Lee’s efforts are part of a growing movement of educators and misinforma­tion researcher­s working to offset an explosion of online misinforma­tion about everything from presidenti­al politics to pandemics. So far, the U.S. lags many other democracie­s in waging this battle, and the consequenc­es of inaction are clear.

But for teachers already facing myriad demands in the classroom, incorporat­ing internet literacy can be a challenge — especially given how politicize­d misinforma­tion about vaccines, public health, voting, climate change and Russia’s war in Ukraine has become. The title of a talk for a recent gathering of Lee’s group: “How to talk about conspiracy theories without getting fired.”

“It’s not teaching what to think, but how to think,” said Julie Smith, an expert on media literacy who teaches at Webster University in Webster Groves, Missouri. “It’s engaging about engaging your brain. It’s asking, ‘Who created this? Why? Why am I seeing it now? How does it make me feel and why?’”

New laws and algorithm changes are often offered

as the most promising ways of combating online misinforma­tion, even as tech companies study their own solutions.

Teaching internet literacy, however, may be the most effective method. New Jersey, Illinois and Texas are among states that have recently implemente­d new standards for teaching internet literacy, a broad category that can include lessons about how the internet and social media work, along with a focus on how to spot misinforma­tion by cross-checking multiple sources and staying wary of claims with missing context or highly emotional headlines.

Media literacy lessons are often included in history, government or other social studies classes, and typically offered at the high school level, though experts

say it’s never too early — or late — to help people become better users of the internet.

Finnish children begin to learn about the internet in preschool, part of a robust anti-misinforma­tion program that aims to make the country’s residents more resistant to false online claims. Finland has a long history of combating propaganda and misinforma­tion spread by one of its neighbors, Russia, and expanded its current efforts after Russia’s 2014 invasion of Crimea set off another wave of disinforma­tion.

“Media literacy was one of our priorities before the time of the internet,” Petri Honkonen, Finland’s minister of science and culture, said in a recent interview. “The point is critical thinking, and that is a skill that everybody needs more and more. We have to somehow protect people. We also must protect democracy.”

Honkonen spoke with The Associated Press earlier this year during a trip to Washington that included meetings to discuss Finland’s work to fight online misinforma­tion. One recent report on media literacy efforts in western democracie­s placed Finland at the top. Canada ranked seventh, while the U.S. came in at No. 18.

In Finland the lessons don’t end with primary school. Public service announceme­nts offer tips on avoiding false online claims and checking multiple sources. Additional programs are geared toward older adults, who can be especially vulnerable to misinforma­tion compared to younger users more at home on the internet.

In the U.S., attempts to teach internet literacy have run into political opposition from people who equate it to thought control. Lee, the Seattle teacher, said that concern prevents some teachers from even trying.

Several years ago, the University of Washington launched Misinfoday, which brought high schoolers and their teachers together for a one-day event featuring speakers, exercises and activities focused on media literacy. Seven hundred students from across the state attended one of three Misinfoday­s this year.

Jevin West, the University of Washington professor who created the event, said he’s heard from educators in other states and as far away as Australia who are interested in creating something similar.

“Maybe eventually, someday, nationally here in the United States, we have a day devoted to the idea of media literacy,” West said. “There are all sorts of things we can do in terms of regulation­s, technology, in terms of research, but nothing is going to be more important than this idea of

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 ?? MANUEL VALDES/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Meadowdale High School 9th grade students Juanangel Avila, right, and Legacy Marshall, left, work together to solve an exercise at Misinfoday, an event hosted by the University of Washington to help high school students identify and avoid misinforma­tion, Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in Seattle. Educators around the country are pushing for greater digital media literacy education.
MANUEL VALDES/ASSOCIATED PRESS Meadowdale High School 9th grade students Juanangel Avila, right, and Legacy Marshall, left, work together to solve an exercise at Misinfoday, an event hosted by the University of Washington to help high school students identify and avoid misinforma­tion, Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in Seattle. Educators around the country are pushing for greater digital media literacy education.
 ?? MANUEL VALDES/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ballard High School social studies teacher Shawn Lee watches over his students at Misinfoday, an event hosted by the University of Washington to help high school students identify and avoid misinforma­tion, Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in Seattle. Educators around the country are pushing for greater digital media literacy education.
MANUEL VALDES/ASSOCIATED PRESS Ballard High School social studies teacher Shawn Lee watches over his students at Misinfoday, an event hosted by the University of Washington to help high school students identify and avoid misinforma­tion, Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in Seattle. Educators around the country are pushing for greater digital media literacy education.

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