Media Literacy Grants in Australia: Funding Critical News and Information Skills

Media literacy — the ability to access, analyse, evaluate, and create media — is increasingly essential in an age of social media, algorithmic news feeds, and deliberately misleading content. Australians who can identify misinformation, understand how media frames stories, and evaluate source credibility are more resistant to manipulation and better equipped to participate in public life. Grant funding supports media literacy education in schools, community programs, journalism quality, and the research that helps understand how Australians consume and evaluate information.

Media literacy in Australia

The information challenge

  • Misinformation spreads rapidly on social media platforms used by millions of Australians
  • News deserts: many regional and local communities have lost local journalism
  • Declining trust in media institutions, alongside rising distrust of expertise
  • AI-generated content and synthetic media creating new verification challenges
  • Partisan media ecosystems in which Australians receive very different information

Who needs media literacy

  • Young Australians: heavy social media use; limited news literacy education
  • Older Australians: less digital native; targeted by health and financial misinformation
  • CALD communities: language-specific misinformation; unfamiliar media systems
  • Regional Australians: fewer local news sources; heavier reliance on social media
  • All Australians: everyone is exposed to misinformation and media framing

Why media literacy matters

  • Health misinformation causes direct harm (vaccine hesitancy, alternative treatment)
  • Political misinformation undermines democratic participation
  • Financial misinformation contributes to scam losses
  • Local journalism underpins local democratic accountability
  • Critical media skills are a foundation of informed citizenship

Government media literacy support

ACMA (Australian Communications and Media Authority)

Misinformation codes and standards for digital platforms.

eSafety Commissioner

Online safety includes evaluating online content — overlaps with media literacy.

Department of Education

Media literacy is part of the Australian Curriculum (English, Humanities).

ABC Education

Public broadcaster media literacy resources for schools.

Philanthropic media literacy funders

The Judith Neilson Institute for Journalism and Ideas

A major Australian funder of quality journalism and media literacy.

Google News Initiative

Support for journalism quality and news literacy programs.

Meta Journalism Project

Community journalism and news literacy support.

The Walkley Foundation

Excellence in Australian journalism; media literacy education.

NewsGuard / First Draft

Misinformation monitoring and media literacy resources.

Types of funded media literacy programs

School-based media literacy

  • Critical thinking about news and media in curriculum
  • Fact-checking as a classroom skill
  • Understanding advertising and commercial media
  • Social media literacy for young people
  • Creating ethical media as part of learning

News literacy

  • Understanding how journalism works (sources, verification, editing)
  • Distinguishing news from opinion and advertising
  • Evaluating source credibility
  • Understanding news framing and selection
  • Media ownership and its effects on content

Misinformation resilience

  • Prebunking — inoculating against manipulation techniques before exposure
  • Fact-checking skills
  • Lateral reading (checking sources across the web)
  • Understanding viral misinformation patterns
  • Reporting misinformation to platforms

Digital media literacy

  • Understanding algorithms and filter bubbles
  • Privacy and data literacy
  • Understanding targeted advertising
  • Social media manipulation awareness
  • AI-generated content detection

Journalism support

  • Local and community journalism funding
  • Regional news sustainability
  • Public interest journalism grants
  • Indigenous media support

CALD community programs

  • Media literacy in community languages
  • Understanding Australian media landscape (for new arrivals)
  • Combating language-specific misinformation

Older Australians

  • News evaluation skills for older people
  • Understanding social media misinformation
  • Health and financial misinformation awareness

Research and evaluation

  • Media consumption patterns in Australia
  • Misinformation spread and impact research
  • Effectiveness of media literacy interventions

The local journalism gap

Local journalism has collapsed across much of Australia:
- Hundreds of local newspapers have closed in the past two decades
- Many regional communities now have no regular local news coverage
- Council decisions, local court proceedings, and community issues go unreported
- Without local journalism, local civic engagement weakens

Grant funding for community journalism, local news cooperatives, and public interest reporting fills a gap that commercial media has abandoned. This is high-impact grantmaking — local journalism is infrastructure for local democracy.

Grant application considerations

Evidence-based programs

Media literacy research has advanced significantly — prebunking, lateral reading, and news literacy approaches have good evidence. Applications building on demonstrated effectiveness are more credible than generic critical thinking programs.

Targeted populations

Different populations face different information challenges. Applications that specifically target health misinformation for older adults, political misinformation for young voters, or financial misinformation for migrant communities are more focused and measurable.

Journalism sustainability

Applications for local journalism support face a different question — not whether journalism is valuable, but whether the model can be sustainable. Applications with revenue diversification and community ownership models are more viable.

Scalable approaches

Given the scale of the misinformation challenge, applications with digital delivery and multiplier effects — teacher training rather than direct student delivery, for example — can reach more Australians.


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

Book a conversation with the Tahua team →