Periodic Reporting for period 1 - Pluridentities (Protecting and stimulating plurilingual identities in learners in Europe via inclusive policies and classroom practices)
Période du rapport: 2024-11-01 au 2025-10-31
English as a global lingua franca reduces the visibility of other languages in schools and learners’ motivation to study them. Heritage languages are often undervalued, affecting pupils’ sense of belonging. Meanwhile, translation tools and AI systems such as ChatGPT transform language learning, creating both opportunities and risks.
Pluridentities brings together partners from Spain, Sweden, Belgium, Aruba, and the Netherlands to understand these challenges and co-develop sustainable educational responses. The project has three main objectives:
1) Educational policies and multilingualism: to identify how policies foster or hinder multilingualism and how technology can be integrated responsibly.
2) Multilingual programmes and attitudes: to study how multilingual education affects language attitudes and identity, with a focus on heritage and non-European languages.
3) Technology and motivation: to examine how new technologies influence language learning and provide practical tools for teachers.
Together, these objectives aim to strengthen Europe’s linguistic capital by fostering inclusive, multilingual, and digitally informed classrooms.
Phase 2 will explore policymakers’ perspectives in WP3, while WP4 and WP5 will pilot Research–Practice Partnerships (RPP) and "broker" trainings in schoolyear 2025-2026.
Overall, the project has created an ethically robust, interdisciplinary basis for the next phase of in-school research, focus groups, and co-creation workshops.
Focusing on adolescents (14–18), the framework combines four dimensions: (i) linguistic capital, (ii) learning environment, (iii) language policy, and (iv) technology. Its novelty lies in analysing their interaction across governance levels and school contexts—an underexplored relationship.
By combining surveys, interviews, and focus groups across five countries, the project fills a gap in research on multilingual adolescents outside English-dominant settings, identifying both national and cross-national trends in language use, motivation, and identity.
Pluridentities also pioneers research on AI and digital tools in language education, evaluating how systems like ChatGPT and machine translation affect motivation and teaching practices, and offering guidance for responsible, creative classroom use. Through theoretical innovation, empirical evidence, and practice, it moves beyond the current state of the art and strengthens EU ambitions for multilingual, inclusive, and digital education.