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Pierre Thomas speaking at a podium to audience.

“The News Literacy Project is one of the most important public service organizations in the nation.”

Pierre Thomas, ABC News Senior Justice Correspondent

What is news literacy? 

News literacy is the ability to judge whether news and other information is trustworthy. It is a key life skill and an important part of any media literacy, digital literacy or civics education program. It prepares students to: 

  • Understand why a free press matters in a democracy.
  • Tell the difference between reliable news and false or misleading information.
  • Spot their own bias and look for facts — not just information that supports what they already believe.
  • Use trustworthy information to make informed choices in daily life.
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Our values

What we believe:

  • News literacy, an essential life skill, is fundamentally nonpartisan.
  • Facts matter.
  • A free press is a cornerstone of democracy.

How we achieve what we believe:

  • Independence and nonpartisanship.
  • Innovation.
  • Inclusion and diversity.
  • Collaboration.
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The challenge

Misinformation is everywhere, causing real harm by dividing communities and eroding trust. Most students aren’t taught the critical thinking and news literacy skills they need to navigate today’s world — in school, at work or in daily life.

Our solution

We believe every K-12 student should learn news literacy just as they do math or English. That is why our goal is bold and ambitious: Make news literacy part of required learning nationwide. As the leader in this work, NLP has the experience and reach to help make this a reality. Students who learn news literacy in middle and high school are better able to spot false or misleading content, identify credible sources and think carefully about the information they use. These skills help them push back against misinformation and make informed choices that shape their futures — and our society.

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Long-term social impact

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Short-term direct impact

3.5 million students taught news literacy skills using NLP resources.*

20,000 educators in more than one-third of all U.S. public school districts using NLP’s resources to teach news literacy.

*Since 2016, when we launched Checkology®, our digital learning platform.

From the start, leading the way

Since NLP was founded in 2008, we’ve expanded our reach and built the expertise to be a leader in the field of news literacy. How we got here:

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Start-up funding

NLP is founded with a $250,000 grant from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.

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NYC and Chicago

NLP launches its in-person classroom program at Williamsburg Collegiate Charter School in Brooklyn and then expands to Chicago.

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Fall forum kick-off

NLP holds the first of many fall forums featuring well-respected journalists.

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Expansion to D.C.

NLP expands into the District of Columbia.

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Chronicling success

The Chronicle of Philanthropy features NLP as an example of a nonprofit that survived and thrived despite launching during the 2008 recession.

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Teaching the teachers

NLP offers the first series of online professional development workshops for teachers nationwide.

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Expansion to Houston

NLP expands to Houston with a pilot classroom program.

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Introducing Checkology®

NLP launches its e-learning platform, making news literacy education available to schools nationwide.

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Organizational milestones

NLP introduces its weekly educator newsletter, The Sift®.

NLP’s website, Newslit.org reaches more than 129,000 visitors for the year, a record.

More than 106,000 students have now been taught news literacy skills using NLP resources (since 2016).

NLP’s budget grows to $3 million and a staff of 10.

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10-year anniversary

NLP releases an upgraded and expanded version of Checkology.

The organization marks its 10-year anniversary

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Growing awareness

NLP removes its nominal paywall on Checkology in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, making the platform free to all educators, students and families.

NLP launches its podcast, Is that a fact?, with an inaugural 10-episode season featuring conversations with experts working to combat misinformation.

NLP hosts its inaugural National News Literacy Week, a campaign that defines news literacy and its importance for educators, students and the public and offering tools for them to improve their news literacy skills.

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Professional acknowledgment

NLP produces a new two-part Checkology lesson on conspiratorial thinking.

NLP launches an online resource library for educators, including lesson plans, classroom activities, posters and infographics, quizzes and more.

NLP earns the Best Digital Tools for Teaching & Learning designation for Checkology by the American Association of School Librarians.

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Expansion accelerates

NLP develops more news literacy education content than at any time since the launch of Checkology in 2016, including three science-related lessons and an editorial cartooning lesson.

NLP’s founder Alan C. Miller is awarded AARP’s Purpose Prize.

More than 1.6 million users visit Newslit.org.

More than 370,000 students have now been taught using NLP resources (since 2016).

NLP’s increases its budget to $5.7 million and a staff of 31.

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$10 million commitment

Melanie and Richard Lundquist, co-founders of the Partnership for Los Angeles Schools and two of California’s most significant philanthropists, announce a $10 million commitment to NLP, the largest donation in the organization’s 14-year history.

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15-year anniversary

NLP produces a new Checkology lesson, “Harm & Distrust,” which explores the history of racist mainstream news coverage of Black Americans to put the larger issue into focus.

NLP publishes its Framework for Teaching News Literacy, a guide for educators with common standards, essential questions, knowledge and skills objectives.

NLP launches RumorGuard®, a new platform that teaches people how to identify credible information and debunk viral rumors.

NLP pilots its District Fellowship program as the most effective way to integrate news literacy instruction into districtwide curriculum. Fellowship models became a guide for other districts to follow.

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More accolades

NLP is awarded The David M. Rubenstein Prize, the highest honor from the Library of Congress Literacy Awards Program.

Checkology is awarded the Webby People’s Voice Award from the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences.

NLP’s RumorGuard is awarded the Best Digital Tools for Teaching & Learning designation as an innovative fact-checking tool by the American Association of School Librarians.

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News literacy research

NLP publishes its first original study, News Literacy in America: A survey of teen information attitudes, habits and skills.

NLP announces its first National News Literacy Conference for educators, to be held in Utah in October 2026.

More than 1.4 million students have now been taught using NLP resources (since 2016).

NLP’s budget grows to $9.3 million and its staff expands to 47.

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Checkology now on Clever

NLP releases an enhanced version of Checkology, consolidating all its educator resources on the platform, which is now a one-stop shop for teaching news literacy.

NLP launches Checkology on Clever, the second most-used edtech platform in K-12 education, further expanding its reach.