Multilingual Learning for a Globalised World

Published: 16 March 2021

Our free online course is available on FutureLearn for another 6 month run.

This free online course will explore multilingual education and how it can impact and improve education and even wider society. 

Please note that this course is not currently being facilitated, however all materials remain available to work through.

Understand why languages matter

Our languages are an essential part of who we are as human beings. They are instruments of communication and are often a source of dignity and of human pride. Our life experiences and views of the world are bound up in our languages. Our sense of self might be strengthened by our ability to speak the language we choose or curtailed by our inability to understand the language that speaks to us. Some scholars even say that the right to speak one’s languages should be established as an essential part of the right to be oneself. They suggest that this language right should be honoured in all forms of communication.

In this course, you will explore how people’s language practice, and the personal connection people have to the language(s) they speak, provoke important philosophical and pedagogical questions around the ways we form personal relationships, engage in business relations and even view the world around us.

Explore how languages challenge the way we live

English is the language of worldwide communication. Should this change? Should people’s personal language practices influence the way we communicate on a global scale? How might the claim for people’s language rights challenge the language arrangements in our societies? What is gained and what is lost from speaking just one language?

These are just some of the questions you will consider and during the course; there will be plenty of opportunities for you to share your experiences, so we can learn from each other.

Registration is FREE at Multilingual Learning for a Globalised World

The course will be available until September 2021.


First published: 16 March 2021