On January 4, Gov. Phil Murphy (DN.J.) signed legislation making New Jersey the first state to require K-12 schools to teach skills that will improve media literacy and students’ ability to decipher between accurate and ...
New Jersey is now requiring all students in grades K-12 to be taught “media literacy” as a means of fighting so-called misinformation. “Our democracy remains under sustained attack through the proliferation of disinformation that is ...
Gov. Phil Murphy (D-NJ) signed a new law Wednesday that will make the Garden State the first to require “media literacy” education in schools. The new law, which passed with bipartisan support in the state ...
New Jersey has become the first state in the country to require public schools to teach media literacy to K-12 students as a way to combat misinformation, under a bill signed Wednesday by Gov. Phil ...
(TNS) — With the Internet and social media now firmly established as dominant places to get news and info, New Jersey may soon create standards for students in all grades to learn how to discern ...
Listen to the article 4 mins This audio is auto-generated. Please let us know if you have feedback. Dive Brief: New Jersey is set to become the first state to require information literacy curriculum standards ...
Students in New Jersey could soon be required to learn how to spot misinformation. The New Jersey legislature, on Nov. 21, passed a bipartisan bill that would require public schools to teach media literacy. Media ...
New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy will be receiving a media literacy bill from the New Jersey Senate to sign, a bill that would make New Jersey the first state to mandate information literacy education for ...
Sophie Nieto-Munoz | New Jersey Monitor Teachers and librarians urged lawmakers (in New Jersey) Thursday to advance a bill that would require all grades to learn about information literacy, which supporters say would help students ...
The newer security measures also come after Democratic Assembly spokesman Craig Coughlin said last week he was outraged by Republicans’ behavior, calling it a “colossal” security failure. Even so, there was still some confusion on ...