National News Literacy Week encourages us all to recognize misinformation and not to spread it
WASHINGTON,
The third annual National News Literacy Week begins today, with "Stop the flood of misinformation … care before you share" as its theme. This initiative is backed by more than 30 news organizations that have signed a letter in support of news literacy, agreed to publish it and/or donated ad space to help promote the week. The letter says: "In our role as the Fourth Estate, it is our mission to keep the public well-informed and to provide high-quality journalism that holds those in power accountable… We pledge to double down on efforts to be fair, accurate, representative and transparent in our journalism — and crystal clear on what is opinion and analysis and what is straightforward news reporting."
"We asked news organizations all over the country to unite behind this cause, which we believe is crucial for a healthy democracy," said
This year's National News Literacy Week features a public service announcement conceived of by the global communications and advertising firm Saatchi & Saatchi. The campaign stresses the role everyone plays in sharing information and everyone's responsibility to do so mindfully and responsibly. This theme is reflected in the video of people in an elevator who are nearly drowned by a flood of misinformation before they work together to stem the rising water.
Throughout the week, the
The public, educators and journalists can get involved with National News Literacy Week in several ways:
- Visit NewsLiteracyWeek.org to learn about events happening during the week and specific actions you can take to improve your own news literacy skills.
- Share your support for news literacy via social media by using this social media toolkit.
- Consider running a letter supporting news literacy signed by numerous news outlets.
- Attend any of the educator events taking place throughout the week.
- Watch and share the public service announcement.
- Join the conversation on social media using the #NewsLiteracyWeek hashtag.
"My colleagues and I talk about this all the time, within our organization and throughout the industry," said
- Print, digital, broadcast and social media assets are available in support of the five-day campaign or for ongoing placement throughout 2022. For print assets, contact
Darragh Worland , NLP's vice president of creative services, at dworland@newslit.org. - Journalists interested in covering the campaign or news literacy can connect with NLP to learn more about its resources for the public and educators, including The Sift®, a weekly newsletter covering topical news literacy issues, the Checkology® e-learning platform, the Newsroom to Classroom program, and NewsLitCamp® — a professional development event for educators, hosted by news organizations and taught by journalists and NLP experts. For more information, contact gphysic@newslit.org.
Below is an open letter from the members of National News Literacy Week presented by the News Literacy Project and
Dear Reader,
"With imperfect information, we make imperfect decisions."
That line, taken from the
Our newsrooms are supporting the third annual National News Literacy Week (
It is vital that news consumers attain the skills to discern fact from fiction, understand how our newsrooms decide what is newsworthy, and recognize the standards we follow to ensure trust in what we publish or broadcast. This is essential if fact-based information is to remain central to our discourse and the functioning of our democracy.
In our role as the Fourth Estate, it is our mission to keep the public well-informed and to provide high-quality journalism that holds those in power accountable. In addition, our audiences must be news literate — and empowered to make fact-based decisions about
their lives.
We pledge to double down on efforts to be fair, accurate, representative and transparent in our journalism — and crystal clear on what is opinion and analysis and what is straightforward news reporting. Everyone — including educators, students, parents, community members, business leaders, politicians, and social media influencers — relies on the fact-based information we provide every day.
We urge you to take a moment to become news literate. Visit NewsLiteracyWeek.org to learn more about what you can do to avoid spreading misinformation.
Please join us in securing a fact-based future where we can all make the best decisions for our communities and our country.
|
Sincerely, |
|
|
Michael A. Anastasi, |
|
|
Editor and Vice President, Tennessean |
Editorial Director, |
|
Nancy Barnes, |
|
|
Senior Vice President for News and Editorial Director, NPR |
Executive Editor, |
|
Todd Benoit, |
|
|
President and COO, Bangor Daily News |
Founder and CEO, |
|
|
|
|
Editor and Vice President, Detroit Free Press |
Senior Vice President of News and |
|
Greg Burton, |
|
|
Executive Editor, The Arizona Republic |
Editor, cleveland.com/The Plain Dealer |
|
Nicole Carroll, |
|
|
Executive Editor, |
Editor, |
|
Chris Dolan, |
|
|
President and Executive Editor, The Washington Times |
Editor, Valley Breeze |
|
Timothy C. Dwyer, |
|
|
President and Publisher, The Day |
Editor & Publisher, |
|
Stephen Engelberg, |
Staff, |
|
Editor-in-Chief, ProPublica |
|
|
Patti Epler, |
|
|
Editor and General Manager, Honolulu Civil Beat |
President and CEO, |
|
Richard A. Green, |
|
|
Executive Editor, The Press Democrat |
Executive Director and CEO, |
|
Pascale Fusshoeller, |
|
|
Editor, YubaNet |
Co-founder and Publisher, The 19th* |
|
Mary Irby-Jones, |
|
|
Executive Editor, The (Louisville) Courier Journal |
Senior Vice President, |
|
Scott Kraft, |
|
|
Managing Editor, Los Angeles Times |
Senior Executive Editor of Standards, Training, Diversity, and Talent, |
# # #
About Scripps
About the
The
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/national-news-literacy-week-encourages-us-all-to-recognize-misinformation-and-not-to-spread-it-301466215.html
SOURCE
Gina Physic, Senior Manager of Media Relations, News Literacy Project, 202-505-4659,gphysic@newslit.org; Michael Perry, Senior Director, External Communications, Scripps, 513-259-4718, Michael.Perry@scripps.com