Enhancing Media Literacy in Higher Education: An Experimental Study on Misinformation Through a Gamified Intervention in Peru

Authors

  • Julio-César Mateus Universidad de Lima
  • Manuel Etesse Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú
  • Diego Vásquez-Cubas Universidad de Lima
  • Elohim Monard University of Wisconsin - Madison
  • Giancarlo Cappello Universidad de Lima

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.65476/znt4bq22

Keywords:

misinformation, inoculation theory, media literacy, fake news resilience, higher education, Bad News

Abstract

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.

Downloads

Published

2026-02-26

Issue

Section

Articles

Most read articles by the same author(s)