Using technology for multilingual learning: Challenges and
opportunities
International Mother Language Day recognizes that languages and
multilingualism can advance inclusion, and the Sustainable Development Goals’
focus on leaving no one behind. UNESCO believes
education, based on the first language or mother tongue, must begin from the
early years as early childhood care and education is the foundation of
learning.
The theme of the 2022 International
Mother Language Day,
“Using
technology for multilingual learning:
Challenges and
opportunities,”
raises the potential role of technology to advance multilingual education
and support the development of quality teaching and learning for all.
Technology has the potential to address some of the greatest challenges in
education today. It can accelerate efforts towards ensuring equitable and
inclusive lifelong learning opportunities for all if it is guided by the core
principles of inclusion and equity. Multilingual education based on mother
tongue is a key component of inclusion in education.
During COVID-19 school closures, many countries around the world employed
technology-based solutions to maintain continuity of learning. But many
learners lacked the necessary equipment, internet access, accessible materials,
adapted content, and human support that would have allowed them to follow
distance learning. Moreover, distance teaching and learning tools, programmes
and content are not always able to reflect language diversity.
Safeguarding Linguistic Diversity
Languages, with their complex implications for identity, communication, social
integration, education and development, are of strategic importance for people
and planet. Yet, due to globalization processes, they are increasingly under
threat, or disappearing altogether. When languages fade, so does the world's
rich tapestry of cultural diversity. Opportunities, traditions, memory, unique
modes of thinking and expression — valuable resources for ensuring a better
future — are also lost.
Every two weeks a language disappears taking with it an entire cultural
and intellectual heritage. At least 43% of the estimated 6000 languages spoken in the world are endangered.
Only a few hundred languages have genuinely been given a place in education
systems and the public domain, and less than a hundred are used in the digital
world.
Multilingual and multicultural societies exist through their languages
which transmit and preserve traditional knowledge and cultures in a sustainable
way.
#mother_language #UN #HWPL #PEACE_WORLD #LANGUAGE
#COVID_19
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