No, thousands of people did not die from the coronavirus vaccine -- and other news literacy lessons
This is the latest installment of a weekly feature on this blog lessons from the nonprofit News Literacy Project, which aims to teach students how to distinguish between what is real and what is not in this age of digital communication.
The material comes from the projects newsletter, the Sift, which takes the most recent viral rumors, conspiracy theories, hoaxes and journalistic ethics issues and turns them into timely lessons with discussion prompts and links. The Sift, which is published weekly during the school year, has more than 10,000 subscribers, most of them educators.
The News Literacy Project also offers a program called Checkology, a browser-based platform designed for students in grades six through 12 that helps prepare the next generation to easily identify misinformation. Checkology is free for educators, students, school districts and parents. Since 2016, more than 29,000 educators and parents in all 50 states and the District of Columbia have registered to use the platform. Since August, more than 1,000 educators and parents and more than 34,000 students, have actively used Checkology.
You can learn more about the News Literacy Project and all of the educational resources it provides in this piece, but here is a rundown
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/no-thousands-of-people-did-not-die-from-the-coronavirus-vaccine-%e2%80%94-and-other-news-literacy-lessons/ar-BB1fnZLH?li=BBnb7Kz