Once Phase 1 is fully completed, Pluridentities advances multilingual education by linking policy, pedagogy, and technology in a multilevel framework connecting macro policy with classroom practice. It supports EU priorities on plurilingualism and identity (Council Recommendation 2018), viewing European identity as dynamic and multilayered.
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.