International project will bring

Mobile Stories out into Europe

An ambitious new multinational project aims to enhance youth media and news literacy in Europe and beyond.

Photo: Lotta Bergseth

“Promoting Media Literacy and Youth Citizen Journalism through Mobile Stories” — or ProMS — will bring together seven partner organisations from six European countries to scale up an innovative production and publishing tool that equips young people with the skills and knowledge to become responsible and informed producers, consumers and distributors of digital media.

The two-year project will create an international English language version of Mobile Stories, a Swedish publishing tool and platform developed by journalists Lotta Bergseth and Jenny Sköld that guides students through the process of identifying and creating trustworthy news content on the Internet while building journalistic ethics.

Increasing access to verified, trusted content

Founded in response to the rapidly changing ways we communicate and consume information, Mobile Stories has reached more than 10,000 students in Sweden since its launch in 2015. The ProMS consortium will work together to expand the Mobile Stories community across the European continent and the globe. The English version will be piloted in schools in Finland, Ireland and Romania before widespread dissemination in the second year of the project. 

In addition to widening access to the platform, ProMS will promote cross-border media literacy by enabling collaboration between schools in different European countries within the tool. 

The project will also contribute to best practices in school-based media literacy by generating data on user skills and knowledge gain and sharing the learnings with research and practitioner communities. 

Meet the consortium

ProMS is funded by the European Commission’s Creative Europe Programme and led by Voice4You, the nonprofit arm of Mobile Stories and the first Swedish initiative to receive funding from Google’s global charity branch, Google.org. Voice4You will lead project management activities and technical development of the international version. 

Along with Voice4You, the consortium includes specialists in youth media literacy, education and technology.

Screenshot of the consortium during the project kick-off meeting

News Decoder, a global news site for young people based in France, will lead the development of inclusive and accessible media education content in English and oversee a user feedback and research strategy in collaboration with the Institute of Future, Media, Democracy and Society at Dublin City University in Ireland. 

– The ProMS project aligns directly with News Decoder’s commitment to creating more open access journalism and media literacy education resources, said News Decoder Managing Director Maria Krasinski.

News Decoder will also help facilitate cross-border collaboration among students within the tool, and support aspects of project management, monitoring and evaluation and dissemination.

Belgium-based international not-for-profit association Media & Learning will lead dissemination, promotion and distribution activities for the ProMS project, drawing on its mission to advance education through the strategic utilisation of media and digital technologies across all levels of education. 

– In an age of disinformation, media literacy is essential for young people to be informed citizens. The ProMS project is a timely and important initiative that will empower youth to produce and consume digital media responsibly and critically, said Media & Learning Project Officer Chloé Pété.

Academic partners Åbo Akademi University with Vasa Övningsskola as one of the pilot schools, Asociatia Apulum Forum and Committee of the Dublin West Education Centre will coordinate beta testing of the English-language version of Mobile Stories with pilot schools in Finland, Romania and Ireland, respectively. These pilots will collect student and teacher feedback to refine the tool and gather research on the tool’s impact on students’ knowledge, skills and behaviour. 

Tritonite, technical developer of the original Mobile Stories tool based in Sweden, will continue as the project’s technical partner for the English language version. 

The ProMS project officially launched on October 1 with a virtual kick-off meeting on 10 October. It will continue until September 2025. 

Interested in knowing more?

Project Coordinators: Lotta Bergseth lotta@mobilestories.se & Jenny Sköld jenny@mobilestories.se 

This Project has received funding from the European Union under grant agreement: CREA-CROSS-2023- MEDIALITERACY-Project 101136134.

Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Education and Culture Executive Agency (EACEA). Neither the European Union nor EACEA can be held responsible for them.

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