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Finland Teaches 3 Year Olds To Spot Fake News

Finland has been waging a quiet but incredibly effective war against fake news and disinformation for decades, and the battle begins in preschool classrooms with students as young as 3 years old learning to analyze media and recognize false information. The Nordic nation of 5.6 million people has woven media literacy into its national curriculum since the 1990s, creating a robust anti-misinformation program that has made Finland regularly rank at the top of the European Media Literacy Index compiled between 2017 and 2023. At Tapanila Primary School, teacher and vice principal Ville Vanhanen recently taught his fourth grade students how to spot fake news and evaluate whether online content is trustworthy, with 10-year-olds analyzing prompts displayed under a “Fact or Fiction?” banner on the classroom TV screen. The coursework has become especially critical as Finland shares an 830-mile border with Russia, where disinformation campaigns have intensified since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine nearly four years ago and Finland’s ascension into NATO in 2023.

Now teachers are adding artificial intelligence literacy to their curriculum, teaching students how to recognize if pictures and videos are AI-generated, a skill that experts say is becoming increasingly vital as technology advances and fake content becomes harder to detect. Finnish media organizations actively support these educational efforts, organizing an annual “Newspaper Week” where papers and news are sent to young people, and in 2024 the Helsinki-based newspaper Helsingin Sanomat created an “ABC Book of Media Literacy” that was distributed to every 15-year-old in the country as they began upper secondary school. The program even extends beyond children, with additional courses available for older adults who might be especially vulnerable to misinformation, proving that Finland’s comprehensive approach to truth and media literacy has created a culture where critical thinking about information sources is deeply ingrained across all generations.

Source: https://apnews.com/article/fake-news-classrooms-finland-russia-194b32d8829838bfe47469d6ff357689

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