Students watching an Italian film in a language lab

Literacies in Language Education

This initiative gives teachers research-based tools, resources, and experiences to effectively apply multiliteracies pedagogy and engage students with authentic texts in secondary and post-secondary classrooms.

Initiative Overview

Engaging learners with meaningful and enriching cultural content is an essential goal of language education. Developing students' foreign language literacies through a range of target language texts can help teachers meet this goal and cultivate students' critical thinking skills as well as their interpersonal, interpretive, and presentational communication abilities.

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How Do We Define Foreign Language Literacies?

Traditional definitions of literacy focus on language users’ ability to read and write accurately. Yet in the 21st century, being literate in a language entails other abilities such as:

  • understanding and creating multimodal texts like web pages;
  • communicating across cultural and geographical contexts; and
  • using language for a range of social, professional, academic, and everyday purposes.

Because the modern meaning of literacy is multidimensional and dynamic, it is more appropriate to speak of literacies in the plural. The term “foreign language” is used in relation to the concept of literacies to underscore that we are speaking about literacies development in languages other than one’s first language.

Definitions of other key terms are available in the literacies glossary. We continue to update this list, so be sure to check back regularly!

Why Adopt a Literacies Approach to Language Education?

It is important for language classrooms to reflect the dynamic, socially-determined, and multidimensional uses of language encountered in daily life. Adopting a literacies orientation helps meet this goal and has a number of advantages for teachers, students, and language programs, including:

  • equipping students with the tools necessary to navigate the complex world of foreign/second languages and cultures;
  • engaging students with various types of written, audio, audiovisual, and visual materials in the target language that provide a window into the products, practices, and perspectives of the target cultures they study;
  • providing a point of articulation between secondary and post-secondary contexts; and
  • bridging the language-content divide that characterizes many postsecondary language departments.