Media literacy courses for fact-checking, bias detection, and source evaluation.
Learn the skills to verify claims, map narratives, and protect yourself and your team from misinformation—using clear checklists, real examples, and fast drills that fit your schedule.
Fast, repeatable verification workflows
Checklists you can apply in under 5 minutes—before sharing, citing, or reacting.
Misinformation defense you can measure
Pre/post drills and scenario-based scoring to track actual improvement.
Minimalist learning design
Less noise, more signal: clean UI, short lessons, and crisp summaries.
Catalog: pick a course by goal, level, and format
Search and filter the live catalog (loaded from catalog.json). Open any course to view syllabus, prerequisites, and skills.
Keyword
Search in title, tags, category, instructor, and short description.
Quick filters
Use a single tap to narrow down. Combine them for precision.
A practical method to evaluate sources and claims
Clarimedia courses are built around repeatable micro-actions: isolate the claim, inspect the source, triangulate with independent evidence, and document your reasoning so it holds up under scrutiny.
1) Claim extraction
Turn a post into verifiable statements and identify what would count as evidence.
2) Source evaluation
Check authority, incentives, history, and whether the claim is original reporting.
3) Triangulation
Corroborate with primary data, independent outlets, and domain experts.
4) Clear write-up
Summarize what’s known, unknown, and misleading—without overclaiming.
What you’ll get in 14 days
A focused learning sprint. The timer below starts when you open the plan and helps you maintain momentum without overwhelm.
14-day practice plan
Small steps, daily drills, and a clean log of what you verified and why.
Today’s suggestion: Pick a recent claim you almost shared. Write down the exact statement and what would falsify it.
FAQ: media literacy training, clearly answered
Short, practical answers—so you can start learning without guessing what “verification” really means.
Do I need prior experience?
No. Beginner courses start with simple source checks and gradually add bias and narrative analysis.
What makes these courses “minimal UX”?
Short lessons, fewer distractions, and quick action prompts—designed for retention and speed.
Is it only about “fake news”?
No. You’ll learn about incentives, framing, selective evidence, and honest mistakes—plus how to respond.
Will I get a certificate?
Courses include completion verification details in each course modal, based on format and requirements.
Start learning media literacy with a clear, focused catalog
No dark patterns, no clutter. Just structured courses on fact-checking, bias detection, and misinformation defense.