LCoL Festival of languages 2026: Ways to get involved

LCoL Festival of languages 2026: Ways to get involved

🎯 Introduction: What is London City of Languages?

London is one of the most linguistically vibrant cities in the world — a place where hundreds of languages are spoken, learned, shared, and celebrated every day.

London City of Languages (LCoL) brings this richness to the forefront by championing the languages used across our communities, schools, colleges, universities, workplaces, and cultural institutions.

Our aim is simple:

  •  to celebrate London’s extraordinary language diversity
  • to inspire people of all ages to learn and enjoy languages
  • to engage families, schools, and communities in supporting language education

Whether you’re part of a school, a business, a community group, or simply someone who loves languages, there are countless ways to get involved.
From May to July, we will be shining a spotlight on activities and events as part of our London City of Languages: Festival of Language – and we would love you to be part of it!


🌍 Who Can Get Involved?

Anyone can take part, including:

  • Education: Early Years, Primary, Secondary, Further, Higher, Adult, Third Age; mainstream and supplementary
  • Institutions: cultural, arts, humanities, sciences
  • Civic and political organisations: councils, libraries, community centres
  • Businesses and employers
  • Individuals (including aspiring influencers!)

🗓️ When?

  • LCoL is a year‑round initiative
  • Special focus: May–July Festival of Language

📍 Where?

  • In person / Online / Hybrid

🚀 How to Get Involved

This is your quick‑start guide:

  • Advertise the initiative / campaign; spread the word about the campaign
  • Join existing LCoL‑badged events [see this page]
  • Promote what you already do
  • Create new activities
  • Collaborate with others

📚 Resources


💡What Can You Do?


💡 Ten Activities to Start the Ball Rolling


1. 📣 Advertise

What you could do: Promote LCoL opportunities and encourage participation.
Example: Showcase the Poster Competition and display entries in your space.
Resources: LCoL activity page: info sheet + PPT


2. 🎤 Presentation / Talk

What you could do: Share why languages matter in your context.
Example: Deliver an assembly at school, staff briefing with colleagues, or a community talk.
Resources: ALL “Why Study Languages?


3. 🎨 Create a Display

What you could do: Celebrate languages visually in your setting.
Example: Build a Language Identity Wall featuring all languages spoken in your space.
Resources:Resources: LL Display Pack


4. 🌟 Celebrate Your Community

What you could do: Highlight the linguistic skills of staff, learners, families, or community members.
Example: Bulletin feature; video introductions; social media posts (#LondonCityOfLanguages).
Resources:Resources: LL Display pack


5. 🎧 Create Audio / Video

What you could do: Capture multilingual voices and stories.
Example: “A Day in My Language” videos; staff introductions; multilingual phrase clips.
Resources: LCoL audio/video project – launching May


6. 🏆 Competition / Challenge / Quiz

What you could do: Create a fun challenge linked to languages.
Example: Duolingo contest; pub quiz; BC Great Languages Challenge; LL board game.
Resources: LL Activity Pack; LL Boardgame; BC Great Languages Challenge ; LCoL Duolingo guide


7. 🎭 Themed Session / Day / Week

What you could do: Explore a cultural or linguistic theme.
Example: Music, theatre, dance, books, food, calligraphy, crafts, games; visits or show‑and‑tell.
Resources: LCoL Design an Arabic Tile; BC EDoL resources


8. 🌍 Discover New Languages

What you could do: Offer taster sessions or revive dormant skills.
Example: Teach greetings, songs, rhymes, politeness phrases, phonics contrasts.
Resources: LCoL Taster Guide


9. 🚶 Beyond Your Setting

What you could do: Organise an external visit or invite a guest speaker.
Example: Museum, cinema, cultural centre, library, partner school.
Resources: e.g. BC webinar ‘Where will languages take me?’


10. 🤝 Collaborate

What you could do: Partner with others to amplify impact.
Example: Joint events with supplementary schools; shared workshops; cross‑interest collaborations.
Resources:Language Ambassadors Case Study


🧭 Suggestions for Different Settings

All Settings


Primary Schools – emphasis on family engagement and play

The Lightning Languages resource packs provide a wealth of resources especially suitable for Primary.
https://www.twinkl.co.uk/resources/twinkl-partnerships/cities-of-languages-partnerships

  • Work with supplementary schools – Strengthen links with community language education.
  • Invite families into school – Parents/carers share stories in their home languages.
  • Run a whole‑school Culture Day https://ncle.ucl.ac.uk/culture-days-with-european-languages/
  • Set up a Language Café – Pupils practise ordering food in another language.
  • Learn songs and dances – Simple and engaging ways to experience another language.
  • Play games in another language – Use basic phrases such as “your turn”, “start”, and “stop”.

Secondary Schools – lively and student‑led

Collaborate with supplementary (Saturday) schools
Partner with local community language schools attended by your pupils.

  • Language Ambassadors
    Enable enthusiastic linguists to deliver taster sessions in feeder primary schools.
  • Show and Tell presentations
    Pupils present on a randomly assigned country, language, or culture.
  • Organise a Culture Day
    https://ncle.ucl.ac.uk/culture-days-with-european-languages/
  • Run a Duolingo competition
    Reward progress based on XP, time spent, or vocabulary learned.
  • Create language quizzes
    Students design interactive quizzes on languages, cultures, or countries.
  • Design a language-focused walking tour
    Pupils create a local or London-based tour highlighting linguistic landmarks (e.g. using Google Maps).
  • Organise cultural trips
    Visit cultural centres such as Institut Français, Goethe-Institut, or embassy libraries, musuems  and cinemas.

Supplementary (Saturday / Community / Heritage) Schools

  • Host celebration events
    Invite families and the community.
  • “Proud of My Language” showcase
    Students present poetry, drama, or projects in their heritage language with bilingual elements.
  • Create exhibitions
    Include migration stories, recipes, proverbs, calligraphy, and community history.
  • Run student-led talks
    TED-style presentations on “Why My Language Matters”.
  • Intergenerational storytelling
    Invite older community members to share stories.
  • Collaborate with mainstream schools
    Joint events and shared learning opportunities.
  • Submit student-created content
    Short videos such as “A Day in My Language” for LCOL.

Cross‑Sector Collaboration

Mainstream schools are encouraged to take the lead.

  • Identify local supplementary schools and build partnerships.
  • Co-create:
    • Language taster sessions led by heritage learners (see guide on the LCoL site)
    • Cultural workshops (e.g. calligraphy, music, food, dance)
    • Joint assemblies on multilingualism
  • Invite heritage learners to act as Language Ambassadors.
  • Develop a shared Language Identity Wall showcasing all languages spoken.
  • Strengthen mutual understanding between mainstream and supplementary education.

Businesses and Employers

  • Celebrate workplace languages
    Share the languages spoken by employees on social media. Use our hashtag #LondonCityofLanguages
  • Host a multilingual event
    Celebrate with food and cultural activities.
  • Promote language skills
    Highlight the value of multilingual employees.
  • Engage with schools
    Offer guest speakers to discuss careers and the importance of languages.
  • Collaborate locally
    Restaurants and community businesses can support campaigns and events.

Higher Education (Universities & Language Centres)

  • Run outreach sessions
    Deliver language and culture workshops for schools.
  • Create a “Language Zone”
    Offer activities such as:
    Language tasters
    Cultural workshops (origami, crafts, etc.)
    Film nights and exchanges
  • Partner with cultural institutions to run or host an event
    Libraries, museums, cinemas, bookshops, and music venues.
  • Work with community groups
    Arts, sports, volunteering, and local organisations.
  • Organise academic talks
    Use postgraduate students and networks.
  • Collaborate across departments
    (e.g. Music, History, Science).
  • Co-badge existing university events
    Include lectures, concerts, and public events under LCoL.

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Featured Image: Thanks to Venuja, Plashet School