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Digital Literacy and the Spread of Misinformation Among Students, Explanatory Synthesis for Australia

Digital literacy serves as a critical defensive mechanism for students navigating the complex landscape of contemporary information ecosystems. This synthesis evaluates the effectiveness of educational interventions and institutional support systems in mitigating the influence of misinformation while fostering critical resilience within the Australian educational context.

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Analysis

Comparative Efficacy of Literacy Interventions

Analytic findings suggest a clear divide between passive information consumption and active critical engagement. While formal informatics courses demonstrate significant improvements in the identification of verified versus manipulated content [1], library-led initiatives offer a broader reach by embedding literacy within the research lifecycle [2]. The contrast between these models highlights that while gamified approaches increase student engagement and attention to climate-related misinformation [5], library-based programs remain essential for building long-term, institutionalized resilience against broader disinformation campaigns [4].

Method

Evidence Synthesis Framework

This synthesis adopts a desk-research design to evaluate the efficacy of digital literacy initiatives across diverse academic environments. The approach involves the systematic review of international pedagogical frameworks, including gamified inoculation strategies and library-led verification protocols [4][5]. By establishing clear comparison criteria focused on measurable improvements in information detection, this work maps global best practices onto the unique requirements of Australian higher education [2][6].

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Digital Literacy and the Spread of Misinformation Among Students, Explanatory Synthesis for Australia

Author:

Group

First M. Last

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Dr. First Last

City, 2026

Introducció

The rapid digitisation of the educational landscape has facilitated unprecedented access to information, yet it has simultaneously exposed students to an infodemic of misinformation. As digital media platforms become primary sources for learning, the ability to critically evaluate content quality has transitioned from a supplementary skill to a fundamental requirement for academic and civic participation [2][3].

Within the Australian context, the integration of digital literacy into formal curricula remains uneven, often failing to address the specific vulnerabilities of diverse student populations. The persistent threat of manipulated content—whether in public health or climate discourse—necessitates a robust pedagogical response that moves beyond basic access to foster deep critical resilience [1][5].

This synthesis examines the current state of digital literacy research to identify successful instructional models and institutional supports. By evaluating international evidence alongside local policy requirements, this work aims to provide a comprehensive framework for educators and policymakers to strengthen student resilience. The following sections explore the theoretical underpinnings of information literacy, compare successful global interventions, and outline strategic recommendations for the Australian tertiary sector [4][6].

References

  1. A Web Tool to Help Counter the Spread of Misinformation and Fake News: Pre-Post Study Among Medical Students to Increase Digital Health Literacy (2023)
    Valentina Moretti, Laura Brunelli, Alessandro Conte et al.
    Lien DOI
  2. The Role of Libraries in Improving Digital Literacy and Preventing Misinformation Among Students (2025)
    Apriani Riyanti
    Lien DOI
  3. Indigenous Students and Media Literacy (2026)
    Al-adzkhan N. Abdulbarie, Jepoy H. Najalli, Alwhadin K. Adjid et al.
    Lien DOI
  4. Libraries as Hubs for Media Literacy and Countering Digital Misinformation (2026)
    Jogen Sharma
  5. The cranky uncle game—combining humor and gamification to build student resilience against climate misinformation (2022)
    John Cook, Ullrich K. H. Ecker, Melanie Trecek-King et al.
  6. A global outlook to the interruption of education due to COVID-19 pandemic: Navigating in a time of uncertainty and crisis (2020)
    Aras Bozkurt, Insung Jung, Junhong Xiao et al.

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