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Media Literacy and Digital Communication

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Chapter 22.1

Master Media Literacy and Digital Communication

Develop the critical thinking skills to evaluate digital content, identify misinformation, and communicate responsibly in today's connected world.


What You'll Learn

Source credibility requires verifiable evidence and identifiable author credentials.
Deepfakes and selective editing are common deceptive digital media techniques.
Key vocabulary includes bias, algorithms, clickbait, propaganda, and echo chambers.
Fact-checking and cross-referencing sources protect against digital misinformation spread.

What You'll Practice

1

Students verify source credibility before sharing potentially misleading digital content.

2

Learners identify deceptive techniques like deepfakes and selective video editing.

3

Practice questions assess understanding of key media literacy vocabulary and concepts.

Why This Matters

Mastering media literacy and digital communication empowers students to navigate misinformation, evaluate sources critically, and engage responsibly in an increasingly digital world.

This Unit Includes

Practice exercises
Learning resources

Skills

Media Literacy
Fact-Checking
Source Credibility
Media Bias
Digital Citizenship
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