Enhancing Media Literacy in Higher Education: An Experimental Study on Misinformation Through a Gamified Intervention in Peru
From the article
This experimental study assesses the effectiveness of a technology-based educational intervention aimed at countering misinformation among young Peruvian university students (aged 18–22), applying inoculation theory through the gamified intervention Bad News , adapted specifically for Latin America. As a conceptual replication of Basol et al., the study preserves the original experimental design while extending it to a Latin American, Spanish-speaking context. A total of 301 first- and second-year students from two private universities in Lima were randomly assigned to either a treatment or control group. Through pretest and posttest measurements and statistical analyses (Student’s t-test, two-way ANOVA), findings demonstrate that playing Bad News significantly reduces the perceived reliability of misinformation content on social media. A significant interaction was found between the intervention and maternal education level. Although no statistically significant interaction effects were found for self-perceived media literacy or trust in traditional and social media, both variables independently predicted more critical evaluations of misinformation. This research represents a pioneering effort in Latin America, a region lacking experimental studies that validate gamified interventions for critical thinking against misinformation.
Continue reading on International Journal of CommunicationYou might also wanna read
Rethinking Comparative Media System Theory From Ghana: Toward a Patronage-Based Hybrid Model
International Journal of Communication·10d ago
Tim Wu, The Age of Extraction: How Tech Platforms Conquered the Economy and Threaten Our Future Prosperity
International Journal of Communication·10d ago
Multilingual Misinformation Pathways in Ethiopia: Translation Chains, Bridge Actors, and Community Verification Across Networked Publics
International Journal of Communication·10d ago
Caty Borum and David Conrad-Pérez, Radical Reality: Documentary Storytelling and the Global Fight for Social Justice
International Journal of Communication·10d ago
Elisabetta Ferrari, Appropriate, Negotiate, Challenge: Activist Imaginaries and the Politics of Digital Technologies
International Journal of Communication·10d ago
Xiaochang Li, Divination Engines: Natural Language Processing, Artificial Intelligence, and the Making of Algorithmic Culture
International Journal of Communication·10d ago
Comments
Sign in to join the conversation.
No comments yet. Be the first.