Toggle Main Menu Toggle Search

Open Access padlockePrints

Global Citizenship Education and Multilingual Competences

Lookup NU author(s): Professor Tony Young

Downloads

Full text for this publication is not currently held within this repository. Alternative links are provided below where available.


Abstract

The Global Citizenship and Multilingual Competences toolkit is a European-Commission funded project with partners across Europe (GCMC, 2023; Mairi et al, 2023). Its aim is to provide online teacher development resources for secondary teachers of all subjects to integrate global citizenship goals and plurilingual pedagogies into their practices in a sustainable way. This presentation focuses on GCMCs conceptual background and its co-productive development process involving a multidisciplinary group of educators and academics with interests in Global Citizenship Education (GCE), intercultural communication, second language acquisition and teacher development. In the GCMC project, we define Global Citizenship (GC) as an “awareness, caring, and embracing [of] cultural diversity while promoting social justice and sustainability, coupled with a sense of responsibility to act” (Reysen & Katzarska-Miller, 2013, p. 858). GCE has become part of many international educational policies and appears explicitly in UNESCO’s global or sustainable development goals (SDGs) for quality education. An appreciation of linguistic plurality and the integration of plurilingual pedagogies are core contributors to global citizenship, “when skills increase in different languages, [people] become aware of their identities as multilingual persons [as well as] their possibilities of being active, multicultural, global citizens” Torpsten (2011, p. 4). Therefore, this project aims to support teachers in developing their knowledge and skills about plurilingual pedagogies and how to respect and utilize the linguistic resources learners and teachers may bring with them into the classroom. Our hope is that the free online course and toolkit will inspire a large number of researchers, teachers and teacher educators with ideas about how to make global citizenship and plurilingual pedagogies of their regular practices. Progress towards UNESCO’s Sustainable Development Goals depends on active, engaged future citizens who respect each other, appreciate diversity, and can work together as collaborators across cultures, languages and contexts.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Young TJ

Publication type: Conference Proceedings (inc. Abstract)

Publication status: Published

Conference Name: 18th International Conference on Language and Social Psychology (ICLASP18)

Year of Conference: 2024

Online publication date: 16/06/2024

Acceptance date: 01/02/2024

URL: https://www.tlu.ee/en/bfm/iclasp18


Share