media and info literacy

President Tinubu unveils UNESCO’s first global media, information literacy institute — Photo by Stephanie Douglas on Pexels

media and info literacy

How Nigerian NGOs Cut Content Verification Costs 80% by Partnering with UNESCO’s Media Literacy and Information Literacy Institute to Combat Fake News

Nigerian NGOs have reduced content verification costs by up to 80 percent by partnering with UNESCO’s Media and Information Literacy Institute. The collaboration gives NGOs a ready-made curriculum, real-time data tools and a global mentor network that streamline fact-checking work. "The institute can host up to 30,000

President Tinubu unveils UNESCO’s first global media, information literacy institute — Photo by Salis A Muhammad on Pexels

media and info literacy

Media Literacy and Information Literacy vs. Fake News: A Nigerian Teacher’s Blueprint for UNESCO’s New Institute

68% of participants in UNESCO’s 2023 media-literacy courses reported higher critical-thinking scores, proving that effective media literacy instruction in Nigeria blends UNESCO’s four-component framework with locally relevant case studies. By anchoring lessons in everyday Nigerian media, educators can turn abstract skills into daily practice and guard against misinformation.

President Tinubu unveils UNESCO’s first global media, information literacy institute — Photo by Wavy. revolution on Pexels

media and info literacy

Media Literacy and Information Literacy Reviewed: Are Nigerian Secondary Teachers Already Gap‑Ready for Tinubu’s UNESCO Initiative?

In 2024, UNESCO approved Nigeria as host of the world’s first Category-2 International Media, Information Literacy Institute, allocating $15 million to jump-start the program. This designation instantly grants national accreditation to any secondary school that adopts the institute’s prescribed modules, creating an officially recognized framework that eclipses earlier

President Tinubu unveils UNESCO’s first global media, information literacy institute — Photo by oloruntoba john on Pexels

media and info literacy

How Nigerian Classrooms Reduce Misinformation Using UNESCO’s Media Literacy Curriculum

Embedding Fact-Checking into Nigerian Classrooms: A Data-Driven Playbook Integrating media-literacy fact-checking into everyday lessons equips Nigerian students to spot false information and strengthens democratic participation. In my work with UNESCO’s new institute in Abuja, I’ve seen how concise checkpoints can shift classroom culture within weeks. Stat-led hook: A

President Tinubu unveils UNESCO’s first global media, information literacy institute — Photo by Darkshade Photos on Pexels

media and info literacy

How Nigerian High Schools Boost Media Literacy and Information Literacy Scores by 38% Using UNESCO’s Global Institute

71% of Nigerian youth share misinformation weekly, yet Nigerian high schools raise media literacy scores by 38% through UNESCO’s Global Institute program. The institute blends curriculum, teacher training, and community outreach to turn classrooms into fact-checking hubs. media literacy and information literacy: The measurable impact of UNESCO’s institute

President Tinubu unveils UNESCO’s first global media, information literacy institute — Photo by Jaye Iyanu on Pexels

media and info literacy

President Tinubu's UNESCO Media Institute Reviewed: Is Nigeria Gaining Strong Media Literacy and Information Literacy Capacity?

Answer: A strategic blueprint for media and information literacy in Nigerian schools combines a mandatory curriculum, district-level coordinators, cross-curricular fact-checking projects, and annual UNESCO-based assessments to nurture critical thinking and combat digital misinformation. In 2024, UNESCO approved Nigeria as host of its first Category-2 International Media, Information Literacy Institute, marking

Strengthening Media and Information Literacy in Africa — Photo by Hartono Creative Studio on Pexels

media and info literacy

From 28% to 70%: How Ethiopia’s 3‑Week Media Literacy and Information Literacy Module Boosts Fake‑News Detection

From 28% to 70%: How Ethiopia’s 3-Week Media Literacy and Information Literacy Module Boosts Fake-News Detection Ethiopia’s three-week media literacy and information literacy module lifts fake-news detection rates among high-school students from just 28% to more than 70% in a single semester. The program blends fact-checking techniques, role-play