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Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin

(113,375 posts)
Mon Sep 30, 2024, 02:27 PM Monday

Mary Trump - Irony Dies--Again

CBS recently reported on a decade-long initiative in Finland to educate student in media literacy. This is not a separate course but, rather part of the national core curriculum starting in preschool.

Leo Pekkala, the director of Finland’s National Audiovisual Institute, explains that, “No matter what the teacher is teaching, whether it’s physical education or mathematics or language, you have to think, ‘OK, how do I include these elements in my work with children and young people?’”

The goal is to teach students how to avoid scams, identify false information, and debunk propaganda—to learn, that is, how to separate fact from fiction. What, for example, is the difference between ads and stories, between poems and publicity?

Li Andersson, former education minister, said, “I think it should be seen as a civic skill in the current society that we live in, because we all live in an information society nowadays, or it’s called an information society; but, actually some of the information is mis- or disinformation.”

https://www.marytrump.org/p/irony-diesagain

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Mary Trump - Irony Dies--Again (Original Post) Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Monday OP
Taught this 25 years ago Dear_Prudence Monday #1

Dear_Prudence

(702 posts)
1. Taught this 25 years ago
Mon Sep 30, 2024, 03:29 PM
Monday

When I taught college, I would send my freshman students out to do research on a topic. When using the internet, I cautioned them to be skeptical:
1. Consider the source
2. Look for inflammatory language as an indicator of bias
3. Compare the information with your own knowledge

Of course, nowadays, in my own mind, I would add 'Are Trump/Vance's lips moving?' But #1 would still serve when instructing public education students.

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