Whether you’re focused on your classroom, home, community, or constituents, we have a number of resources and tools available to help you advocate for media literacy education. The MLN Resource Library is offered as one convenient source of information, like any other library.

Resource Highlight

Teaching students to find trustworthy information needs to become a priority in more science classrooms. Learning to Find Trustworthy Scientific Information, published by Media Literacy Now in September 2023, identifies our goals and recommendations to help K-12 students better evaluate scientific information.

Each year, we publish the Media Literacy Policy Report outlining the status of media literacy education laws for K-12 schools in the U.S.. The 2022 report was released in February 2024 and shows the significant progress of state-level policymakers as well as other organizations and key institutions and individuals to recognize an urgent need for media literacy education and to take action.

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This online game is like an extended version of Go Viral! It …
Students form groups of three. Each group finds one wacky-sounding science story …
This “prebunking” online game introduces users to some common strategies to spread …
This engaging game can be downloaded as an app or played using …
Harmony Square is an online game about fake news. The game’s setting …
This game helps students who are not experts reflect on the nature …
This activity allows students to conduct an open web search in which …
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