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This book explores how Artificial Intelligence is reshaping language education, acknowledging both its pedagogical potential and the challenges it introduces. It examines teacher cognition, assessment, feedback, and intercultural training alongside concerns about ethics, bias, and hallucinated content. Together, these discussions reflect on what responsible and well-informed use of AI in Higher Education should entail.
Through case studies, exploratory investigations, and reflective analyses, contributors present practical approaches to classroom integration. Drawing on a range of institutional and linguistic contexts, the volume traces the evolving professional role of language teachers, showing that human judgement and disciplinary expertise remain essential even as AI becomes more prominent in educational ecosystems.
The collection supports educators, researchers, and practitioners navigating a rapidly changing landscape. Distinct from much current literature, it brings together perspectives from multiple countries and linguistic traditions, positioning the volume as an invaluable resource for those working across diverse educational settings worldwide.
Wissia Fiorucci is Reader in Education and Language Centre Director at the University of Kent, UK. She serves as Honorary Secretary for the University Council for Languages and is co-founder and convenor of the Modern Languages Teaching Forum. Her edited collection Language Education During the Pandemic (2023) examined pedagogical responses to crisis and rapid technological change. Her teaching and research focus on language education practices, intercultural communication, and assessment in Higher Education, with particular interest in how learning environments respond to social and technological evolution.
Alvise Sforza Tarabochia is Senior Lecturer in Italian and Director of Education at the University of Kent, UK. He co-founded and convenes the Modern Languages Teaching Forum and serves as Italian Studies Representative in the University Council for Languages. His teaching covers Italian language, visual culture, intercultural communication, and language for professional contexts. His recent book, Making Madness Visible: A Cultural History of How Mental Disorder is Visualised (2026), investigates the shifting representation of mental disorder across history, language, and media.
| Publication Date: | 15 May 2026 |
| Publisher: | Springer Nature Switzerland |
| Imprint: | Palgrave Macmillan |
| ISBN-13: | 9783032165190 |
| Format: | Hardback |
| Page Count: | 283 |