Media Literacy Courses

Master evidence-based methods to navigate information, verify claims, and communicate responsibly. Structured curricula, hands-on assignments, and mentor feedback.

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What you will gain

  • Detect manipulation tactics and recognize bias with repeatable checklists.
  • Verify sources, trace claims, and evaluate evidence quality.
  • Create ethical, accessible, and transparent content.
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Structured learning paths

How it works

  1. 1Learn frameworks: evidence, incentives, context, and uncertainty.
  2. 2Practice with real-world examples: headlines, images, charts, and short videos.
  3. 3Ship your final checklist and a transparent sourcing template you can reuse.
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Proof-first approach

Media literacy is not about “winning arguments” — it’s about building reliable habits: checking primary sources, identifying incentives, and documenting uncertainty. Our exercises emphasize traceability and ethical communication.

Bias map
Spot framing & omissions
Verification loop
Claim → evidence → context
Ethics checklist
Harm minimization

SEO Highlights

Our media literacy training is designed for journalists, educators, analysts, non-profits, and responsible creators. Each module includes plain-language explanations, annotated references, and practice tasks with feedback.

  • Search-friendly titles and structured headings.
  • Clean URLs and descriptive link text.
  • Accessible contrast and keyboard-friendly modals.

If you are comparing media literacy courses, prioritize programs that teach verification workflows, source evaluation, bias detection, and ethical publishing — with practice tasks that mirror real online information environments.

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Sample syllabus (micro preview)

A realistic snapshot of what learners practice in our media literacy courses.

Module 1 — Information environment
  • Signals vs. noise, incentives, audience targeting
  • Misinfo taxonomy: satire, propaganda, fraud, mistakes
Module 2 — Bias & framing
  • Language cues, omissions, cherry-picking
  • Checklist: “What would change my mind?”
Module 3 — Verification workflow
  • Claim tracing, primary sources, evidence grading
  • Context checks for images, charts, and quotes
Module 4 — Ethical creation
  • Transparency: citations, uncertainty, corrections
  • Harm minimization & accessibility basics
Mini exercise (2–3 minutes)

Pick a headline you saw today. Answer three questions: What is the claim? What evidence is shown? What would you need to verify it?

Free micro-lesson: “The 30-second verification reset”

A quick routine you can use before sharing, quoting, or reacting.

Step 1 — Identify the exact claim

Rewrite it as one sentence. If you can’t, you’re reacting to tone, not information.

Step 2 — Ask “what evidence is shown?”

Look for primary sources, data, documents, or on-the-record statements. Screenshots and viral clips are not enough.

Step 3 — Perform one context check

Check the date, the original publisher, and whether the content is reposted or edited. If unsure, label uncertainty or don’t share.

Why this works

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