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Large high school cafeteria set up with student displays at each table. Students stand at each table and present to small groups of parents.

Misinformation tears us apart.

Our students can bring us back together.

What is Media Mentorship?

Media Mentorship projects give your students a chance to become the teacher and help their peers, families, or larger community learn what it takes to navigate today's information environment. 

See it in Action

Blue outline of a map of washington state with seven cities marked with a dark pink dot.

Students create  interactive displays for community members to view at local businesses.

Medical Lake

Students lead 5-minute interactive stations for local senior citizens and senior citizens lead stations for students.

Sedro-Woolley

Students lead 5-minute interactive stations for students from another grade, class, or school.

Camas

Students lead 5-minute interactive stations for families at a school-based event.

Chimacum, Oakville,

Port Townsend, Seattle

How Do I Get Started?

Flowchart with boxes that say 1 - Choose audience and format, 2 - teach media literacy lessons, 3 - Students design projects, 4 - Invite your audience, 5 - Students present projects. Each box is clickable.
A large group of senior citizens and students sit together at tables in a community center.

"...it was an amazing experience which gave me hope for the future. A truly revolutionary approach that converts a school's information literacy curriculum into true community capacity."

Mike Caulfield, Digital Literacy Expert​

Connect With Us

Planning to do Media Mentorship with your students?

Our goal is to build a movement, one Media Mentorship project at a time.
We’d really love to hear from you. 


Register your interest here to speak to a Media Mentorship team member, get connected with other projects in your area, feature your project on this site, or simply be counted as a participating class. 

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