Public school students in California will soon learn media literacy skills to help them identify fake news online and distinguish ads from legitimate news stories, thanks to a new law.
The law, which requires an education commission to consider incorporating media literacy content into K-12 curricula when they’re revised after Jan. 1, was introduced in February. Gov. Gavin Newsom signed it in October.
California is one of a small but growing number of states, including Texas and New Jersey, that are including media literacy skills in public education, according to a report last year from Media Literacy Now, a nonprofit group. California’s new law is aimed at encouraging more discerning consumption of content on social media and digital platforms, where fake news and deepfake videos abound.








