Recognizing fake news, being savvy about social media and resisting cyberbullying would be a required part of California school curriculum under a bill now making its way through the Legislature.
Assembly Bill 873, authored by Assembly member Marc Berman, D-Menlo Park, would direct the state's Instructional Quality Commission to incorporate media literacy into K-12 curriculum in English language arts, math, science, history and social studies frameworks. Eventually, all public school students would receive media literacy lessons every year, in every class.
"We need to make sure the next generation has the critical thinking skills and analytic skills to be discerning about what they're bombarded with online," Berman said. "My hope is that students talk to their parents about this, too."
In 2018, California passed optional media literacy guidelines, which focus on teaching about online privacy and safety, conducting research online and other topics related to internet use. This bill goes further in that it addresses misinformation and social media use specifically, and would be required in classrooms.
The bill passed unanimously in the Assembly and is now in the Senate Education Committee.
Also making its way through the Legislature is a related bill, AB787, by Assemblymember Jesse Gabriel, D-Woodland Hills, which would require State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond to survey schools to gauge the current state of media literacy education in California, and then devise a model program to implement statewide.
But AB 873, if it passes, would bring media literacy to classrooms much sooner.
"We believe these two bills, if signed into law, would bring California to the forefront of this important policy area and ensure our students are well-equipped to face the rapidly evolving digital, online landscape," said Kami Peer, California policy manager at Common Sense Media, a nonprofit focused on youth and media.
If either or both bills pass, California would join a growing number of states that are adopting media literacy curriculum, in part due to concern about the rise of misinformation online and teenagers' increasing use of social media. In most states, the guidelines are optional, but in a few -- New Jersey, Delaware and Texas -- the lessons are mandatory. In almost all cases, media literacy is taught in existing classes, but in some states it's a stand-alone class.
Berman said he was inspired to write the bill when he learned that social media is the primary source of news for many people, including teenagers.
"Misinformation and disinformation is rampant on social media, and can lead to real-world terrifying events like Jan. 6 and the large percentage of people who believe the election was stolen," he said.
A 2019 Stanford University study, "Students' Civic Online Reasoning: A national portrait," found that two-thirds of students surveyed couldn't differentiate between editorial content and advertising, and 96% didn't understand why a climate-change website funded by a fossil fuel company might be suspect.
Alvin Lee, a sophomore at Stanford and executive director of a student advocacy group called GENup, said he was inspired to support AB 873 by the plethora of fake news on social media. He recalled how his mother asked him if Hillary Clinton was indeed running a child sex trafficking operation from a Washington, D.C., pizzeria. Known as "pizzagate," the theory has been widely discredited as fake news, but that didn't stop his mother from momentarily believing it.
"Misinformation is so prolific on social media," Lee said. "It's absolutely critical that we start thinking seriously about media literacy, for the sake of democracy and the future."
Ideally, he'd like to see schools teach more than just skills like recognizing fake news. The topic should include information literacy, as well -- the ability to critically analyze all information online and in print.
Peer, at Common Sense Media, said media literacy can have broad relevance in schools at all grade levels. When students learn how to do online research, for example, they need to understand plagiarism and copyright law. When they start exploring social media, they should learn about privacy and etiquette. When they create their own TikTok videos, they need to be responsible for sharing accurate, credible information. When they study current events, they need to recognize whether a source is reliable and fair.
It's important for schools to take on media literacy because "schools are dealing with the ramifications, including issues such as online safety, cyberbullying, privacy, hate speech, misinformation and digital distraction," Peer said.
"Digital literacy equips students, families and school staff with the knowledge to thoughtfully navigate and safely engage with digital content," Peer added. "It also empowers young people to analyze and assess the influence of content on their thoughts, feelings and behaviors."
This story was originally published by EdSource here.
Comments
Registered user
Old Palo Alto
on Jun 7, 2023 at 2:26 am
Registered user
on Jun 7, 2023 at 2:26 am
@CarlineJones very interesting. Since Silicon Valley also known at Palo Alto & Santa Clara County Valley has been
and is the hub of all International computer programming, websites, apps — where does this leave our very own children who have been subjected, co-opted to a state of the algorithm, techno based economy that has fueled this trajectory of global, “poison” pill. As a center to everything tech, our kids know it, feel it, live it. Yet they also see they r witness 2?the disparity between a population left to a side-line of unknowing. Those residents who did not get “online” soon enough and are pushing & pulling carts, relying on disappearing analogue transit schedules, who bank w/out an ATM card, who live without an Ethernet connection to a Internet world. How does our center of the Internet App based universe account? Even applying for a local rental requires an account, a username, password & log-in. All before a credit check, application fee. How do our children rise above the lions share of our local/global trajectory and maintain individual land collective humanity? With AI quickly taking hold where to encourage our youth, our children in PA to commence forward upward in non engineer careers like bio-chemistry, oceanography, geology, English, fine Art, theater, Music. My 17 year-old child truly believes human existence on Earth only has 20 years left. How can Stanford, Google, Apple, Facebook tool up to encourage investment in our human and earth saving subjects outside of the Software Engineer etc. I have been reading,hearing, seeing major telephone companies hauling the fast paced AI takeover. Yet. It’s taking over. I am afraid it’s too late. AI does not require a minimum wage, overtime pay, benefits. When nursing home employees are forced to use and have a iPad to
Registered user
Another Palo Alto neighborhood
on Jun 7, 2023 at 8:32 am
Registered user
on Jun 7, 2023 at 8:32 am
I am already seeing advertisements for AI camps for kids for this summer. AI is moving so quickly and it is the under 30s who are making the inroads and teaching even younger individuals so those of us older than 30 will once again feel like dinosaurs when talking about the subject, let alone those who make the laws about such things.
However, my real comment is whenever I see something like this, I always wonder what will not be taught to allow the times for this new educational requirement.
The idea that schooling should teach the 3 Rs and prepare for future employment is still the core requirement for school education. All sorts of social issues are now supposedly requirements and I have to ask how much time is being spent on these issues v core subjects. We still need people to be able to read and write, to be arithmetic competent even in the computerized world in which we live. Keyboard skills appear to have replaced cursive as most under 30s are unable to read or write in cursive. Spelling and grammar seem to be less important than when I was in high school. Being able to calculate basic numerical problems is important otherwise any calculation could be out by tens, hundreds, thousands or more if dependence on apps or programs is all a student can do.
Education is still very basically the 3 Rs, social issues should be primarily learned and discussed in the home with parents, being employable has to be a goal of education. Otherwise, we will have a generation with identical social issue viewpoints, no ability to see another point of view, and completely unable to walk into a job that pays for their basic standard of living. Or have we actually reached that stage alreay?
Registered user
Fairmeadow
on Jun 7, 2023 at 11:11 am
Registered user
on Jun 7, 2023 at 11:11 am
PAUSD could start by restricting phones in our schools: Web Link
Registered user
Old Palo Alto
on Jun 7, 2023 at 12:07 pm
Registered user
on Jun 7, 2023 at 12:07 pm
@ Bystander .... Can't state it any better than how you did. Excellent post. Sadly, California public school education is failing students on many levels and this will just add another layer to the social justice agenda that has seemingly replaced basic K-12 education.