4 in 5 Singapore students under 18 want media literacy classes: Study

Artificial SOCIAL MEDIA NEWS

More than 60 % of children under the age of 18 have received fake information, according to the Milieu Insight study, many of which came from social media platforms like Instagram or TikTok.

According to the study, almost half of boys spend three to four hours a moment on social media. &nbsp,

We discover that the more time users spend on social media, the more likely they are to trust real-world instances of online lies we tell them. So there really is everything about cultural media”, said Prof Tandoc. &nbsp,

” The question is: How can we create our kids more aware of what they post on social media?” Would we keep an eye on how they use it?

The professionals concur that parents are incredibly important in shielding their children from the dangers of fake information, especially now that deepfakes, which uses artificial intelligence to produce encouraging lookalike pictures, videos, and music tapes, are popular.

” Sometimes, some of these young people, when they’re online, may get a call from someone using a deepfake tool to talk to them and pretending to be a family member or parent”, Mr Yao said. &nbsp,

” So we teach parents how to deal with that, how to have straightforward safeguards like a family password to make sure the person they are speaking to is actually not mummy or daddy,” he said.

Through its Character and Citizenship Education (CCE ) program, the Ministry of Education offers media literacy classes to help students identify and stop spreading misinformation.

On average, schools conduct CCE lessons two hours per week.

They teach students how to assess an information source’s reliability and how online lies can spread.