Media Literacy Grants in New Zealand: Funding Critical News and Information Skills in Aotearoa

New Zealand faces the same media literacy challenges as the rest of the democratic world — accelerating misinformation, declining local journalism, algorithmic social media, and the erosion of shared information spaces. New Zealand's small media market makes these challenges acute: the commercial press has contracted significantly, regional and local news has collapsed, and the national broadcaster faces ongoing pressure. Grant funding supports media literacy education, quality journalism, misinformation resilience, and the research that documents how New Zealanders consume and evaluate information.

Media literacy in New Zealand

The information landscape

  • New Zealand has a small commercial media market that has contracted substantially
  • Many regional and local communities have lost local news coverage
  • RNZ (Radio New Zealand) as a public broadcaster provides quality journalism but limited local coverage
  • Strong reliance on social media for news — particularly Facebook for older audiences, Instagram and TikTok for younger
  • Significant Māori media ecosystem: Te Ao Māori News, Māori Television, iwi radio
  • Growing misinformation problem: COVID-19 demonstrated vulnerability to health misinformation

Media literacy challenges in NZ

  • Young people: high social media use; low news literacy; algorithm-fed information
  • Older New Zealanders: targeted by health and financial misinformation via Facebook
  • Rural communities: limited local journalism; dependence on social media
  • Māori communities: some Māori-targeted misinformation and mainstream media bias against Māori
  • Pacific communities: language-specific misinformation; limited Pacific media
  • COVID demonstrated: anti-vaccination misinformation caused real public health harm

The local journalism gap

New Zealand has experienced dramatic loss of local journalism:
- Hundreds of local newspaper closures
- Digital advertising revenue captured by global platforms (Google, Meta)
- Many communities with no local news coverage
- Democracy deficit: councils and local government unscrutinised

Government media literacy support

Broadcasting Standards Authority (BSA)

Standards for broadcast media; some media literacy resources.

New Zealand On Air

Funding for public interest broadcasting including journalism.

RNZ (Radio New Zealand)

Public broadcasting; education resources.

Ministry of Education

Media literacy in the New Zealand curriculum.

Philanthropic media literacy funders in NZ

NZ On Air

Public media funding including journalism.

Journalism.nz

Emerging journalism support ecosystem.

Foundation for Public Interest Journalism

New Zealand journalism and public media funding.

Community foundations

Some local journalism support through community foundations.

InternetNZ

Internet governance and digital literacy, including media literacy components.

Google News Initiative (NZ)

Journalism quality and news literacy.

Types of funded media literacy programs

School-based media literacy

  • Critical evaluation of news and information
  • Fact-checking as a school skill
  • Understanding how social media algorithms work
  • Creating ethical media (school productions, blogs, video)
  • Understanding advertising and sponsored content

News literacy

  • Understanding journalism (sources, verification, editorial decisions)
  • Distinguishing news from opinion from sponsored content
  • Evaluating source credibility
  • Lateral reading — checking claims across multiple sources
  • Understanding media ownership in NZ

Misinformation resilience

  • Prebunking misinformation techniques
  • Fact-checking skills and tools
  • Health misinformation awareness
  • Electoral misinformation and civic information
  • Recognising conspiracy theories and manipulation

Māori media literacy

  • Understanding Māori media landscape
  • Media literacy within te Ao Māori context
  • Critical evaluation of mainstream media coverage of Māori issues
  • Supporting Māori media development

Pacific community media literacy

  • Media literacy in Pacific languages
  • Understanding language-specific misinformation
  • Pacific media development

Local journalism support

  • Community journalism models
  • Local news cooperatives
  • Hyperlocal digital news
  • Public interest journalism grants

Research

  • How New Zealanders consume and evaluate news
  • Misinformation spread and impact research
  • Journalism sustainability research

The public interest journalism model

New Zealand's Foundation for Public Interest Journalism and NZ On Air have pioneered the use of grants for journalism — funding specific public interest journalism projects and investigative reporting that commercial media cannot sustain. This model:
- Funds specific journalism projects (not general operations)
- Focuses on stories that matter but wouldn't be commercially viable
- Includes accountability journalism, investigative reporting, and community news
- Is evidence-based (commissioned research on New Zealand's information gaps)

Applications for journalism support that fit the public interest model — not advocacy journalism, not commercial content, but genuine public interest reporting — are well-positioned.

Grant application considerations

Evidence-based programs

Media literacy research has advanced — prebunking, lateral reading, and news literacy approaches have strong evidence. Applications that build on this evidence, not just generic critical thinking, are more credible.

Local journalism priority

The loss of local journalism is one of New Zealand's most acute media literacy challenges — without local news, communities lack the information they need for democratic participation. Applications for sustainable local journalism models are high-priority.

Māori media recognition

Māori media — Te Ao Māori News, Māori Television, iwi radio — is an important part of New Zealand's media ecosystem. Applications that acknowledge and support Māori media literacy and Māori journalism are more comprehensive.

Scalable digital approaches

Given the scale of the misinformation challenge, applications with digital delivery — online curricula, YouTube resources, social media campaigns — can reach more New Zealanders than face-to-face programs alone.


Tahua's grants management platform supports media literacy funders and journalism organisations in New Zealand — with program reach tracking, knowledge outcome measurement, community engagement data, and the reporting tools that help media literacy funders demonstrate their investment in an informed Aotearoa.

Book a conversation with the Tahua team →