Yes, is the short answer. I couldn't agree more. I think that to frame it as media literacy is very important.
I think we probably would all agree that even before the advent of social media, media literacy was always underplayed and overlooked in our education system. Even when it was the traditional mainstream legacy media that we were mainly concerned about, there were issues as well, including how to empower citizenry about how to engage with media and how to make use of media. That is exponentially more the case now.
While there certainly are some good teachers, practices and modules that I'm anecdotally aware of—including some of the experiences my own children have had as they went through the education system—there is no doubt that right across the country there is, at best, profound inconsistency as to what is offered to young people around digital media literacy in a wider context of media literacy and empowerment. I think it absolutely needs to be prioritized.