It follows recent disorder in more than a dozen towns and cities following the Southport knife attack, which officials say were fuelled by misinformation online.The stabbing spree, allegedly carried out by British-born Axel Rudakubana, left three children dead. Online speculation of the tragedy falsely claimed Rudakubana was a Muslim immigrant.
“It’s more important than ever that we give young people the knowledge and skills to be able to challenge what they see online,” Phillipson told the Sunday Telegraph newspaper. “That’s why our curriculum review will develop plans to embed critical skills in lessons to arm our children against the disinformation, fake news and putrid conspiracy theories awash on social media.”
Under the envisaged changes, students would analyse newspaper articles in English lessons to help spot fabricated clickbait, while computer classes would include analysing statistics in context. However, the review is not set to report its findings until next year, meaning reforms would not come into force until Sept, 2025, according to the Telegraph.
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