Caregiver & Educator Quick-Start Guide
You don't need to be a media expert to teach this curriculum well. This guide gives you everything you need to get started, stay on track, and feel confident leading each session.
Who This Curriculum Is For
This program is designed for:
- Parents and caregivers teaching at home
- Homeschool educators looking for a structured media literacy unit
- After-school and club leaders running weekly enrichment programs
- Classroom teachers supplementing their ELA, social studies, or digital citizenship instruction
- Librarians running youth media programs
The lessons assume one adult working with one student or a small group. They adapt easily to larger groups with minor adjustments (noted below).
Getting Ready for Each Lesson
Prep Time
Most lessons need 5–10 minutes of preparation. That usually means:
- Reading the Facilitator Snapshot (2–3 sentences at the top of each week)
- Glancing at the Key Vocabulary
- Gathering one or two media examples
Finding Examples
Many lessons ask you to bring in a real-world media example. If you can't find the perfect one, don't worry — everyday media works great:
- Cereal boxes, snack packaging, product labels, and grocery store flyers
- School newsletters, public library announcements, and community center posters
- Book covers, magazine ads, local event flyers, and junk mail
- App icons, website homepages, search-result screenshots, and movie posters
- Posters, billboards, transit signs, weather alerts, translated notices, and signs you pass on a walk
The goal is for the student to practice thinking about media, not to find one specific "right" example.
No-Prep Fallback
If you have zero prep time, you can still run a great session. Open the lesson page, look around the room for any piece of media, and follow the conversation prompts. For example, grab a water bottle and ask: "Who made this label? What do they want you to notice first? Why did they choose that color?" The discussion questions work with almost any example. Done is better than perfect — and an imperfect example often sparks the best conversations.
What You'll Need
Time
- Two guided sessions per week (~30 minutes each)
- One independent session per week (~20–30 minutes)
- Sessions can be spread across the week or done in two sittings
Materials
- A notebook or journal for the student (used every week)
- Basic art supplies (paper, pens, markers, scissors)
- Occasional access to a device with a web browser (supervised)
- Printed examples or screenshots for many activities (the Materials List has everything organized by week)
Expertise
- None required. Each lesson tells you exactly what to do, what to say, and what to look for.
How Each Week Works
Every weekly lesson page has the same structure:
| Section | What It Does | Time |
|---|---|---|
| Facilitator Snapshot | A 2–3 sentence summary of the week's big idea — read this first | 1 min |
| Key Vocabulary | Terms introduced this week, with simple definitions | Preview before teaching |
| Connection | How this week connects to last week and next week | 1 min |
| Teacher Preparation | What to gather and the right teaching mindset | 5–10 min (before the session) |
| Guided Session 1 | First lesson — concept introduction through conversation and examples | ~30 min |
| Guided Session 2 | Second lesson — hands-on activity or deeper exploration | ~30 min |
| Independent Session | Student practices on their own | ~20–30 min |
| Quick Check | 2–3 lightweight ways to see if the student understood | 5 min |
| Facilitator Look-Fors | Observable signs that learning is happening | Ongoing |
| Younger/Older Adaptations | Adjustments for different ages | Use as needed |
| Accessibility Options | Alternative ways to participate for different learning styles | Use as needed |
You Don't Have to Do Everything
- If time is short, teach one guided session well and save the other for later.
- The independent session works best after the student has already explored the main idea with you at least once.
- Use the Quick Check to gauge understanding — if the student gets it, move on. If not, revisit the concept through discussion rather than re-teaching.
Teaching Tips
Your Role
You are a learning partner, not a lecturer. The best sessions feel like conversations.
- Ask more than you tell. Start with questions and let the student discover ideas before you explain.
- There are no wrong answers during exploration. If a student says something inaccurate, guide them by asking follow-up questions rather than correcting directly.
- Use the sample wording. Many lessons include phrases like "You could say..." — these are tested language you can use or adapt.
- It's okay to say "I don't know." Model curiosity: "That's a great question. Let's look it up together." This teaches the verification mindset better than any lesson.
Handling Uncertainty
Media literacy is full of gray areas, and that's a feature, not a bug. Here's how to handle the moments when you're not sure of the answer:
- Say "I don't know — let's find out together." This is one of the most powerful things you can model. It shows the student that checking and investigating is what smart people do.
- Think aloud. When you're evaluating an example, narrate your process: "I'm not sure about this claim. Let me see who published it… and when… and whether other sources say the same thing."
- You're a facilitator, not a trivia judge. Your job is to guide the conversation, not to have every answer memorized. The lessons give you the key points — your role is to help the student discover them.
- Not every question has one right answer. Some media is genuinely ambiguous. That's okay. Help the student get comfortable saying, "I can see it both ways, but here's what I think and why."
Epistemic Guardrails — Nuance That Matters
As you teach, keep these important nuances in mind. They help students develop accurate mental models rather than oversimplified ones:
- Emotions in media aren't automatically manipulative. A movie soundtrack, a charity appeal, or a news photo can make you feel something — and that's often honest and appropriate. The question isn't "does this make me feel something?" but "is the feeling proportional and based on real information?"
- Incentives explain choices, but they don't prove dishonesty. A creator who earns money from content isn't automatically untrustworthy. Understanding the incentive helps you ask better questions — it doesn't give you the final answer.
- Algorithms are systems, not villains. Algorithms sort, recommend, and prioritize based on signals. They're powerful tools, not magic or inherently "bad." Understanding how they work gives students agency.
- Perspectives differ, but evidence still matters. Different people can reasonably interpret the same event differently. That doesn't mean all interpretations are equally supported. "Everyone has their own truth" is not the same as "everyone has their own facts."
- Being open-minded doesn't mean treating all claims as equal. Students should consider multiple viewpoints, but they should also learn that some claims are better supported by evidence than others. Fairness means giving ideas a hearing — not pretending all ideas are equally credible.
These guardrails appear naturally throughout the curriculum. You don't need to give a speech about them — just keep them in mind and gently redirect when a conversation starts to oversimplify.
Pacing
- Don't rush. If a concept resonates, spend extra time on it. Exploring deeply is better than covering every activity.
- Don't drag. If the student grasps an idea quickly, move to the next activity rather than over-explaining.
- Adjust for energy. Some days the student will be focused and eager. Other days they won't. Shorter, discussion-based sessions are fine on low-energy days.
Choosing Examples
Many lessons ask you to gather real media examples (a cereal box, a headline, a video clip, a thumbnail). Tips:
- Use what's already in your home. Packaging, mail, books, posters, and apps all work.
- Include media kids actually encounter. Video thumbnails, game notifications, creator/influencer content, recommended videos, memes, group chat screenshots, school announcements, library signs, local business pages, public health posters, and community flyers are all fair game and often more engaging than traditional examples.
- Preview screen-based examples. Before showing a website, article, or video, check that the content (and ads) are age-appropriate.
- Avoid politically charged or emotionally distressing examples unless the lesson specifically calls for them and you feel the student is ready.
- Evergreen over trending. Use examples that will make sense weeks from now, not just today's viral post. Describe situations generically ("a short video where someone reviews a product") rather than naming specific creators or brands that may not age well.
Keeping Examples Nonpolitical and Age-Appropriate
For kids ages 8–12, the safest and most effective examples come from consumer and commercial media — the kind of media that's part of everyday life without being emotionally charged.
Great example categories:
- Food and snack packaging, restaurant menus, grocery store ads
- Animal facts, nature documentaries, weather reports
- Sports highlights, game ads, trading card designs
- Movie trailers, book covers, toy commercials
- App icons, video game packaging, theme park brochures
What to avoid:
- Culture-war topics, partisan politics, and hot-button social issues
- Content designed to frighten or shock
- Examples where adults themselves disagree strongly — these put the child in an uncomfortable position
If a sensitive topic comes up naturally, redirect the conversation toward the process rather than the conclusion. For example: "That's an interesting topic. Let's focus on what we'd check and compare — what sources would you look at? What questions would you ask?" This keeps the learning on track without requiring you or the student to take a position on a charged issue.
Handling Sensitive Media Examples
Use low-stakes examples first: ads, packaging, thumbnails, local flyers, school announcements, hobby posts, or fictional screenshots. Learners can practice serious skills without starting with frightening or highly political examples.
When real news or sensitive topics come up, focus on the thinking routine: Who made it? What is the claim? What evidence is shown? What should we check? Avoid turning the lesson into a debate about what the learner should believe.
- Do not ask learners to share private family media.
- Do not require social media accounts.
- Use screenshots, printed examples, or fictional examples when needed.
- Respect family rules about technology and media access.
When Topics Feel Heavy
Some lessons touch on topics that may feel uncomfortable: manipulation, misinformation, propaganda, deepfakes. A few guidelines:
- Stay empowering, not scary. The message is always "you have tools to handle this," not "the world is trying to trick you."
- Pause if needed. If a student seems anxious, reassure them: "This is exactly why we're learning this — so you know what to do."
- You can skip or postpone. If a topic feels too advanced for your learner right now, move on and come back later.
Age-Banded Verification Goal
For younger or newer learners, the core goal is not mastering every tool. The core goal is building the habit of checking before trusting or sharing.
- Core path for ages 8–10: Ask who made it, check when it was made, look for evidence, compare with one more reliable source, and explain what still feels uncertain.
- Core path for ages 10–12: Add stronger source comparison, basic lateral reading with adult support, and simple evidence tracking.
- Extension path for ages 11–13: Add independent lateral reading, guided reverse image search, source tracing, and stronger comparison across tabs.
The goal for all learners is corroboration before confidence.
Some images, voices, videos, comments, summaries, or screenshots may be AI-generated or AI-edited. That does not automatically make them bad or fake, but it does mean we should ask careful questions: Who shared it? Where did it come from? Is there another source? Does it show evidence? Could it be edited, staged, or generated? What should I do before I share it?
Adapting for Different Settings
One-on-One (Home / Tutoring)
This is the default format. All activities work as written.
Small Group (3–8 students)
- Discussion-based activities become richer with multiple perspectives.
- For independent sessions, let students work individually and then share.
- The "Feed Swap" (Week 14) and "The Re-Edit" (Week 4) work especially well in groups.
Classroom (15+ students)
- Use guided sessions as whole-class instruction with think-pair-share.
- Independent sessions become individual or partner work.
- Add a brief share-out at the end of each session.
- The final project (Weeks 15–18) can include peer review groups.
After-School / Club
- You may have less time per session. Focus on one guided session per meeting.
- The hands-on activities (sorting games, scavenger hunts, design challenges) work well for shorter, higher-energy sessions.
- Skip the journaling components if writing feels like "homework" in this context — use verbal discussion instead.
Working with Mixed Ages (8–12)
This curriculum targets ages 8–12, which is a wide range. Here's how to adapt when working with different ages — or a mix.
Younger Learners (Ages 8–9)
- Use concrete, familiar examples: cereal boxes, cartoon posters, picture book covers.
- Let them draw or talk instead of writing when possible.
- Keep vocabulary simple. Introduce terms, but don't expect mastery of definitions.
- They may need more help connecting abstract ideas ("incentive," "algorithm") to everyday experiences. Use analogies: "It's like when the cafeteria puts the cookies at the front — they want you to notice them first."
Older Learners (Ages 11–12)
- They can handle more nuance and abstraction: gray areas, competing claims, trade-offs.
- Encourage independent research and longer writing when they're ready.
- They'll engage more deeply with ethical questions: "Is it okay to use emotional music in an ad? When is it manipulative?"
- Give them room to form and defend their own opinions.
Mixed-Age Groups
- Let older kids explain concepts to younger ones. Teaching is one of the best ways to solidify understanding.
- Use the same core activity for everyone, but adjust the response format: younger kids draw or sort, older kids write or debate.
- During discussions, ask younger kids first so they aren't intimidated by more sophisticated answers.
- Pair older and younger students for hands-on activities when possible.
Troubleshooting
What if discussion stalls?
Try offering a specific, concrete example instead of an open-ended question. Instead of "What do you think about this ad?" try "What's the first thing your eye goes to? Why do you think they made it that color?" The question "What do you notice?" is almost always a good restart.
What if they give one-word answers?
Use follow-ups that invite more: "Tell me more about that" or "What made you think that?" You can also offer choices: "Do you think this is trying to make you laugh, or make you want to buy something?" Giving two options often unlocks a fuller response.
What if they rush to "it's fake!"?
This is common — and it's actually a sign they're engaged. Redirect them to evidence: "What makes you think that? What would you check to find out?" The goal isn't to stop them from being skeptical — it's to help them back up their thinking with reasons and evidence instead of gut reactions.
What if you can't find a good example?
Use what's already around you. A cereal box, a bumper sticker, a book cover, the label on a water bottle — all of these are media. The lessons are designed to work with everyday examples, not just perfect ones.
What if the child gets frustrated by ambiguity?
Normalize it. "Even experts disagree about this sometimes. The important thing isn't being right — it's knowing what questions to ask." Some kids want clear yes-or-no answers, and media literacy often doesn't provide them. That discomfort is part of the learning. Be patient and acknowledge that it's genuinely hard.
The Media Checkpoint
Throughout the course, students use a consistent seven-question routine called The Media Checkpoint to analyze any piece of media:
- What am I looking at?
- Who made this, who is it for, and why?
- What choices shaped it, and what techniques does it use to get attention?
- What does it want me to think, feel, or do?
- What claims does it make, and what evidence is shown?
- What might be missing or left out?
- What should I check before I trust, share, or act on it?
Incentives Add-On: How might money, popularity, sponsorship, algorithms, or platform goals shape this message?
Students start with questions 1–3 in the first unit and add more as the course progresses. By the end, the routine should feel automatic. Post these questions somewhere visible — on the fridge, next to the computer, or inside the notebook cover.
See the Media Checkpoint page for the full reference and tips.
The Media Detective Notebook
Throughout the course, students keep a Media Detective Notebook — a journal or folder where they record observations, reflections, and artifacts from each week.
Why It Matters
The notebook serves three purposes:
- Makes learning visible. The student can flip back and see how much they've learned.
- Builds cumulative knowledge. Later lessons reference ideas from earlier weeks.
- Provides the best evidence of learning. You can review the notebook to see what the student understands — it's more meaningful than any quiz.
How to Use It
- Introduce it in Week 1. Set it up together and let the student decorate or personalize the cover. Ownership matters — this is their detective notebook, not a school assignment.
- Add an entry every week. Even a short one. Consistency builds the habit.
- Review it together every 4–5 weeks. Flip through past entries and ask, "What do you notice about how your thinking has changed?" This is one of the most powerful reflection moments in the whole curriculum.
- Let the student make it their own. Some kids will write paragraphs. Others will draw, paste in clippings, or use stickers. All of that is fine. The goal is regular reflection, not a polished product.
Setup
The notebook doesn't need to be fancy. A composition book, a binder with loose paper, or a folder with worksheets all work. The key is that the student uses it consistently.
See the Media Detective Notebook page for detailed setup instructions and a week-by-week guide.
Differentiation at a Glance
Every weekly lesson includes differentiation in three areas. Here's what to look for:
| Support Type | What It Provides | Who It's For |
|---|---|---|
| Younger Learner Adaptation | Simpler vocabulary, concrete examples, drawing or verbal responses, shorter tasks | Ages 6–8, or older students who need scaffolding |
| Older Learner Extension | More nuance, real-world research, independent investigation, longer writing | Ages 11–13, or younger students ready for a challenge |
| Accessibility Options | Alternative response formats — verbal, drawing, sorting, partner discussion, photos | Any student who needs a different way in |
You don't need to use all three every week. Pick the one that fits your student, or mix and match as needed. The core concepts are the same for everyone — only the depth, complexity, and response format change.
Assessment Without Tests
This curriculum does not use tests or grades. Instead, it offers several lightweight ways to check understanding:
- Quick Checks at the end of each weekly page (2–3 questions or tasks)
- Facilitator Look-Fors — observable signs that learning is happening
- Reflection questions built into every session
- Periodic checkpoints at the end of each unit (see Assessment Checkpoints)
- The final project — the strongest evidence of understanding
If a student can explain an idea in their own words, apply it to a new example, and ask good questions about media they encounter — they're learning.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does the full curriculum take? 18 weeks at the recommended pace of three sessions per week. You can stretch it longer or compress it shorter depending on your schedule.
Can I skip weeks? Units 1–2 build essential foundations. Weeks 1–8 should be done in order. After that, Units 3 and 4 can be reordered if needed, though the planned sequence works best. The final project (Weeks 15–18) should come last.
What if my child is younger than 8? Every lesson includes a Younger Learner Adaptation section. For very young learners (ages 6–8), focus on guided sessions, use verbal responses instead of writing, and simplify vocabulary. The core ideas are accessible to younger kids — the activities just need to be lighter.
What if my child is older than 12? Every lesson includes an Older Learner Extension section. Older students can handle more nuance, real-world examples, and independent research. They'll also engage more deeply with the ethical dimensions of the curriculum.
Do I need to be on social media to teach this? No. Most examples can be printed, described, or drawn on paper. A few activities work better with a device, but none require the adult or student to have social media accounts.
My student hates writing. What do I do? Every lesson includes Accessibility Options with alternatives: verbal responses, drawing, sorting activities, discussion, and more. Writing is one way to demonstrate understanding, but not the only way.
Getting Started
- Read the Welcome page for the course philosophy and core concepts.
- Skim the Curriculum Overview to see the full sequence.
- Complete the Pre-Course Self-Assessment with your student.
- Check the Materials List for Week 1.
- Set up a Media Detective Notebook for the student.
- Open Week 1 and begin.
Want to understand the pedagogical reasoning? See the Educator Rationale for the curriculum's philosophy, sequence logic, and developmental assumptions.
You're ready. The lessons will guide you from here.