National News Literacy Week starts Monday, and we want you to be a part of it! With your help, young people around the country can learn how to forge a fact-based path through a landscape littered with misinformation and AI fakes. Educators are on the front line of news literacy instruction. Our free resources make it easy to fit these crucial lessons into your curriculum, no matter what subject you teach. Here’s how you can get involved during news literacy’s biggest week: |
-
Register for our free edWebinar on Feb. 3, Influencers, AI, and Credibility: Teach Students About the Information Ecosystem. We’ll explore teaching strategies and resources to help students distinguish between different kinds of content on social media.
|
The news literacy movement needs you — join us Feb. 2-6! For a future founded on facts, The News Literacy Project
P.S. Sharing information about the week with your students’ families? Have them check out our just-released infographic, Teen safety: 6 tips for using AI and social media, developed in partnership with the American Psychological Association. |
|
|
The News Literacy Project, a nonpartisan education nonprofit founded in 2008, is building a national movement to create systemic change in American education to ensure all students are skilled in news literacy before they graduate high school, giving them the knowledge and ability to participate in civic society as well-informed, critical thinkers. | © 2026 The News Literacy Project
5335 Wisconsin Ave. NW, Suite 440, Washington, DC 20015 info@newslit.org |
|
|
If you believe you received this message in error or wish to no longer receive email from us, please unsubscribe. |
|
|
|