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Indigenous Languages: From Policy and Planning to Implementation and Assessment
edX
Course
Beginner
Free to Audit
Certificate

Indigenous Languages: From Policy and Planning to Implementation and Assessment

University of British Columbia

Gain theoretical knowledge and practical skills to develop and implement a language plan. Explore how to approach learning, teaching and transmitting Indigenous languages to present and future generations, in a variety of forms and channels.

3 hrs/week8 weeksEnglish1,151 enrolled
Free to Audit

About this Course

Learners will explore how to develop and implement a language plan that will support individual and community-centered goals for reclamation, revitalization, resurgence, education and/or maintenance based on available resources (e.g., human, financial, linguistic, technology), or resources they need to seek. Learners will have access to IDIL resources and events through UNESCO’s International Decade of Indigenous Languages (IDIL) Global Community. Learners are also encouraged to build and participate in a global community by sharing open access resources with their community members and engaging in global dialogue surrounding language policy, planning, implementation and assessment. In collaboration with UNESCO and in support of the International Decade of Indigenous Languages (2022–2032), this course offers free or low-cost digital learning that does not rely on high-bandwidth or infrastructure to access resources. This course is for: Indigenous community members wanting to develop a language plan for their family, local community, local schools or other settings Indigenous community members interested in language and linguistic human rights, language policies, language conservation and maintenance Graduate students and advanced undergraduate students in international development, teaching, public policy, political science, social sciences and other fields who are interested in language policy, planning, implementation and assessment Teachers, policy makers, government officials and other practitioners interested in the policy and language factors impacting the communities they support and serve Sustainable development practitioners who want to understand linguistic needs and the support that is necessary to help communities locally, regionally, nationally and/or internationally Those who work for international aid organizations and nonprofits in the realms of human rights, language rights, Indigenous Peoples’ rights and education 38:T92

What You'll Learn

  • Policies and frameworks that impact Indigenous language use, linguistic rights and access to resources
  • How to plan, develop, implement and assess Indigenous language projects for different contexts
  • Case studies from Indigenous language scholar-educators and community members that offer insight into specific language initiatives, projects, programs, etc.

Instructors

C

Candace Kaleimamoowahinekapu Galla

Associate Professor of Language and Literacy Education and the Institute for Critical Indigenous Studies

S

Shannon Bischoff

Director of the Three Rivers Language Center and Professor of Linguistics and Anthropology

Topics

Teaching
Planning
Public Policies
International Aid Transparency Initiative
Political Sciences
Social Sciences

Course Info

PlatformedX
LevelBeginner
PacingUnknown
CertificateAvailable
PriceFree to Audit

Skills

التدريس
التخطيط
السياسات العامة
العلوم السياسية
مبادرة الشفافية في المعونة الدولية
Social Sciences

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