Propaganda, misinformation and fake news have the potential to polarise public opinion, to promote violent extremism and hate speech and, ultimately, to undermine democracies and reduce trust in the democratic processes.


It is vital for schools to provide students with a solid education on media and information literacy as part of the curriculum.

Teachers must be well-trained in the subject to empower students with the necessary competences to critically understand and assess information reported by all forms of media.

Projects in partnership with national and local authorities and media organisations are encouraged.
 


Facts & figures

Two thirds of EU citizens report coming across fake news at least once a week.[1]

Over 80% of EU citizens say they see fake news both as an issue for their country and for democracy in general.[2]

Half of EU citizens aged 15-30 say they need critical thinking and information skills to help them combat fake news and extremism in society.[3]


What is propaganda, misinformation and fake news?

The terms ‘propaganda’, ‘misinformation’ and ‘fake news’ often overlap in meaning. They are used to refer to a range of ways in which sharing information causes harm, intentionally or unintentionally – usually in relation to the promotion of a particular moral or political cause or point of view.

It is possible to separate out three clearly different uses of information which fall into this category:

  • Mis-information - false information shared with no intention of causing harm
  • Dis-information - false information shared intentionally to cause harm
  • Mal-information - true information shared intentionally to cause harm.[4]

Although none of these phenomena are new, they have taken on new significance recently with the widespread availability of sophisticated forms of information and communication technology. The sharing of text, images, videos, or links online, for example, allows information to go viral within hours.


Why is propaganda, misinformation and fake news important at school?

Since information and communication technology is so central to their lives nowadays, young people are particularly vulnerable to propaganda, misinformation and fake news. Young people spend a significant amount of their time watching television, playing online games, chatting, blogging, listening to music, posting photos of themselves and searching for other people with whom to communicate online. They rely heavily on information circulated online for their knowledge of the world and how they perceive reality. Many parents do not have sufficient technical competence to keep up with their children’s online activity, or educate them about the risks they might be facing. Schools, therefore, have a duty to provide young people with the critical and information skills which they cannot access at home.
 

“The significant rise of fake news as propaganda in recent years makes it critical that students have the skills they need to identify truth and discern bias.”[5]

The ability to respond critically to online propaganda, misinformation and fake news is more than a safe-guarding tool, however, it is also an important democratic competence in its own right. Analytical and critical thinking, and knowledge and critical understanding of the world, including the role of language and communication lie at the heart of the Council of Europe Reference Framework of Competences for Democratic Culture. They are central to Digital Citizenship Education and Media and Information Literacy.[6]
 

“School is the one place where it is absolutely crucial to train future citizens to understand, to criticise and to create information. It is in schools that the digital citizen must begin and maintain constant critical thinking in order to attain meaningful participation in his or her community.”[7]

The ability to handle off-line as well as online propaganda, misinformation and fake news is also a key skill in a number of other school subjects, e.g., History, Social Studies, Science, Religious Studies and Art. Young people may study the use of nationalistic and patriotic slogans, or so-called ‘atrocity propaganda’ in WW1 in History, for example; or art forms designed to support particular ideologies in Art lessons.

Another area in which information and communication technology is becoming an issue for schools is through adverse comments made about teachers and schools on social media. Schools are finding that parents and others increasingly turn to social media when they have a dispute or disagreement with their school, e.g., over school rules, school policies, or staff behaviour. How to handle online critical or defamatory comments or campaigns of this sort has become a matter of concern for leaders and managers in some schools.[8]


What are the challenges?

There are a number of challenges facing schools wishing to take propaganda, misinformation and fake news seriously as an educational or social issue:

  • Teachers’ own online activity and area of experience is often quite limited and frequently lags behind that of their students. This can make them reticent to take on this area of teaching and learning without a significant commitment to professional development.
  • The speed with which technology and young peoples’ online activity changes makes it difficult for teachers to keep up-to-date with recent developments. Even professional development programmes can go rapidly out-of-date.
  • It can be difficult finding a discrete slot in the school timetable where issues relating to the creation and sharing of information can be taught. While aspects may be raised in a number of subjects, it can be a problem finding a space in an over-full curriculum where the phenomenon can be dealt with head-on as an issue in its own right.
  • The description ‘fake news’ does not mean there is such a category as ‘true’ news. All news is a selection and written to suit a particular audience for a particular purpose. Providing the depth of analysis and sophisticated skills that do justice to this topic can be a challenge for some schools, especially in terms of teacher competence and training.
     

“States should take measures to promote media and digital literacy, including by covering these topics as part of the regular school curriculum and by engaging with civil society and other stakeholders to raise awareness about these issues.”[9]


How can schools get active?

Providing training for teachers on media and information literacy is the key to raising the profile of the issue in schools. Even though it may have a tendency to date, training can at least alert teaching staff to the importance of this area of learning for their students. The more important teachers see the area, the more they will feel the need to continuously up-date their skills themselves.

While it is important to recruit as many teachers as possible to this work, it can be more effective in the long run to start by appointing an individual teacher, or a small team, to lead on media and information literacy in the school. This element of specialist expertise can be charged with:

  • Keeping staff up to date with new developments in information and communication technology
  • Training them in strategies for handling propaganda, misinformation and fake news
  • Helping them integrate these issues into the curriculum of different subjects
  • Leading on school-policy development and action planning in this area.

In addition to these sorts of developments, there are a number of other initiatives a school can take to meet the challenges of the rapidly changing world of online propaganda, misinformation and fake news. These include:

  • Special days or events in school on the subject of propaganda, misinformation or fake news as a way of overcoming the problems of an over-crowded formal curriculum
  • Peer education initiatives in which older students instruct and counsel younger students in the safe handling of information they access in the media
  • Partnerships with outside professionals or companies with expertise in this area, e.g., journalists, IT companies, universities
  • Virtual links with schools in other regions or countries enabling students to get a different perspective on news and current affairs
  • Recruiting parents with expertise in information and communication technology to help with school policy development or work alongside teaching staff to enrich student learning.

 

[1] Flash Eurobarometer 464 , 2018

[2] Ibid.

[3] Flash Eurobarometer 455, 2018

[4] Wardle & Derakhshan, H., 2017. Information Disorder: Toward an interdisciplinary framework for research and policy making. Strasbourg, France: Council of Europe.

[5] When is fake news propaganda?, Facing History and Ourselves, 2018

[6] Digital Citizenship Education Handbook, 2019

[7] Ibid.

[8] Council of Europe: Managing Controversy: a whole school training tool, 2017

[9] OSCE: Joint declaration on freedom of expression and “fake news”, disinformation and propaganda

  Resources on Dealing with Propaganda, misinformation and fake news

Multimedia

Official texts

Policy documents

Studies

Tools

Related schools projects

Back Eça de Queirós School Cluster

Address: Rua Cidade de Benguela

Country: Portugal

 School website


Project: EçaNews – from students to students

 

Working language during the project:

  • Portuguese
     

Themes of the Council of Europe project “FREE to SPEAK, SAFE to LEARN - Democratic Schools for All” covered:

  • Making children’s and students’ voices heard
  • Addressing controversial issues
  • Dealing with propaganda, misinformation and fake news
  • Improving well-being at school
     

Competences from the Reference Framework of Competences for Democratic Culture (CDC) addressed and where / how they were integrated:

  • Knowledge and critical understanding of the world (including politics, law, human rights, culture, cultures, religions, history, media, economies, the environment and sustainability)
    Students have to interpret, analyse, synthesise and think critically at all stages of the project. The need to understand at a meta-cognitive level prior to publishing the news is the key to elevating their critical thinking skills.
  • Responsibility
    This digital journal will be managed entirely by students. As they have to make substantive decisions, the responsibility skill is going to be present on each step of the way.
  • Co-operation skills
    The students will be able to build stronger relationships between their peers to achieve the group goals. Collaboration and cooperation are skills that have to be.
     

Target group age range:

  • 5 - 11
  • 11 - 15
  • 15 - 19
     

Level of education:

  • Primary education
  • Lower secondary education
  • Upper secondary education

Short description of the project:

The EçaNews is a digital journal created by students for the students. They are the top decision makers, the journalists and readers all at the same time, that means, all the students can contribute to this common project.

This is one of the projects resulting from a wider 21st Century Design Learning Programme that the Eça Queirós School Cluster is implementing for the following 3 years. This wider programme, called “[email protected]” has the goal to transform the cluster into an Anytime, Anywhere Learning environment, and is looking to change the education of 2.000 students and 200 educators into an innovative and democratic school cluster.

The changing and media context that we live in provided some difficulties which the cluster is trying to change into opportunities. Using an online collaborative platform for the past 6 months, where board members, teachers, staff and students come together with ease, the EçaNews is a tool for taking stock of these opportunities.

A group of teachers will start the project by picking the students to participate. From there they will only serve as guidance. Students will therefore have full responsibility for their decisions and actions, resulting in a real-life situation that they have to tackle, gathering individual expertise to turn themselves into a coherent group of individuals for achieving the same goal.

The main goals of the EçaNews are to provide the students with the critical thinking skills on all matters related to the school, the various personal and group opinions, to engage in global topics such as educational information to climate change, religion, personal differences, democratic issues, and so on. They have to find evidence for their statements, e.g. news, become aware of different points of views, and also improve their communications skills.

This project will also contribute to their sense of belonging, indeed, the EçaNews is a student-only project. Having all the student as contributors, from all levels of education will enhance the level of difficulty of the project and ensure the students each have different visions, thus showing them new ways to see the world. Since they must take substantive decisions with regard to the journal they will have to work in groups, where they have to find consensus in all decisions, enhancing their collaborative skills. Since there are no grades, nor high or low-stakes assessments related to this project, no one will be obliged to contribute, it is expected that some kind of self-regulatory skills will appear naturally within the students.

Finally, the EçaNews project is a 3-year programme that will engage all the 2.000 student of the 3 schools belonging to the cluster; they will be committed to an exclusive-student project, with the ups and downs of a real-life situation. The teacher will only be there to help them find themselves as democratic citizens.
 

Aims/objectives

  • Students have to achieve at least basic and intermediate CDC key descriptors in knowledge and critical understanding of the world, responsibility and cooperation skills
  • Students have to be proficient in media literacy skills, knowing how to gather and understand different opinions, differentiate right from wrong perspectives, be aware about a source’s credibility and copyright issues, and contribute to a better digital citizenship of the school cluster
  • Students have to work individually, in small groups and with larger groups, making their opinions heard as well as listening carefully to others, trying not to judge but to understand
     

Expected results/outcomes

  • Students have the ability to mobilize values, attitudes, skills and knowledge in order to become active citizens in a democratic society.

Changes

  • By the end of the first year the students know what is needed from a behavioural point of view to be a citizen in a democratic society.
  • By the end of the second year the students can actually influence others in order to be citizens of the world.
  • By the end of the project in 2023, the students already understand with clarity that everyone, mainly their fellow students, have their own status in the world, respect themselves and others, making responsible decisions based on that knowledge.
     

Challenges you faced

  • Having the necessary resources as rooms equipped with computers and wideband internet, and access to scientific articles and studies
  • Publicising the project to the entire education community
  • Teachers’ lack of information and training regarding the digital transformation and the CDC framework
     

Time-frame of the project:

3 year project from October 2020 until July 2023
 

Council of Europe materials on citizenship and human rights education used while preparing or implementing your practice:

  • Reference Framework of Competences for Democratic Culture