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Putting SDG 4 Back on Track After COVID-19: The Essential Role of Multilingualism in Education

Universal Esperanto Association

Even before COVID-19, alarms were sounded that progress on SDG 4 was too slow and that the achievement of its targets by 2030 was in jeopardy.  Linguistic inequality in access to education has been a key factor.  The 2016 Global Education Monitoring Report showed that 40% of the global population was not accessing education in a language they understand.  

The onset of the pandemic exacerbated such inequalities as over 1.6 billion learners experienced school closures, cutting them off from language and literacy learning opportunities.  Moreover, the digital divide prevented vulnerable populations, especially in least developed countries, from accessing online education, including resources for language development.  In order to achieve inclusive and equitable education for linguistically diverse student populations, multilingualism must be foregrounded in post-pandemic educational planning.    

Accordingly, this side event focuses on recommendations for the role of languages in education put forth in Reimagining Our Futures Together: A New Social Contract for Education, the UNESCO report on the Futures of Education initiative.  Specifically, it brings together leading experts in the field of language education from diverse global contexts who address what it means in practice to take a multilingual perspective on the targets of SDG 4.  Drawing upon empirical research and documented best practices, they demonstrate how schools can cultivate multilingual resources, including mother tongues, major world languages, national and regional languages, Indigenous languages, and international languages like Esperanto to achieve inclusive and equitable education that empowers students as global citizens prepared for participation in social, economic, and political life.

Register here for the side-event