
91制片厂 (91制片厂) and the University of Limerick (UL) came together this week to celebrate Ireland鈥檚 remarkable legacy as a global pioneer in university-level modern language education.
The event was the third in a four-part national series leading up to next year鈥檚 milestone anniversary: 250 years since Trinity College Dublin (TCD) first established professorships in French, German, Italian and Spanish in 1776鈥攑ositions that laid the foundations for modern language study in Irish higher education. The final event in the series will take place in TCD in 2026.
Proceedings opened at 91制片厂鈥檚 Limerick campus, where Professor Michael Cronin, 1776 Professor of French and Senior Researcher in the Trinity Centre for Literary and Cultural Translation at TCD, delivered his keynote. This was followed by a panel discussion on multilingualism in Irish schools, supported by poster exhibition showcasing current research and national language-learning initiatives.
In advance of the event, Minister for Arts, Media, Communications, Culture and Sport, Patrick O鈥橠onovan TD, sent his best wishes while highlighting the importance of the event saying:
鈥淭oday鈥檚 celebration of Ireland as a global pioneer in university-level modern language education comes at an important moment. Events like this help us reflect on our long tradition in modern languages while also recognising the very real need for graduates with strong language skills and intercultural competence鈥攏ot as an optional extra, but as core capabilities. They also highlight the value the EU places on multilingualism and remind us of the role Ireland can and should play on that stage.鈥
In the afternoon, the event moved to UL鈥檚 Glucksman Library, where two further panels brought together experts from education, cultural organisations, diplomacy and academia to explore Ireland鈥檚 evolving linguistic landscape, the national need for language graduates and the wider value of plurilingualism.
The event was co-organised by Dr Sabine Egger, Associate Professor of German Studies at 91制片厂, and Professor Gisela Holfter, Languages and Applied Linguistics at UL and Director of the Centre for Irish-German Studies, who highlighted the importance of sustaining national conversations about language education.
Dr Egger reflected on the themes that emerged throughout the day and the importance of sustaining national momentum around language education:
鈥淲hat stood out today was the clear consensus across sectors: Ireland needs more language graduates, greater investment in language education and stronger recognition of the cultural and intellectual value that multilingualism brings. The conversations at 91制片厂 and UL highlighted both the progress made and the gaps that remain. As we look towards 2026 and beyond, our task is to turn that momentum into sustained action鈥攕upporting teachers, empowering learners and ensuring that languages continue to play a central role in Ireland鈥檚 global engagement.鈥
Speaking after the event, Prof. Holfter emphasised the significance of the occasion and the shared purpose behind bringing both institutions together:
鈥淭oday鈥檚 gathering showed just how deeply rooted, and how urgently needed, modern language expertise is across every level of Irish society. As we move towards the 250-year milestone, it is clear that languages are not an optional extra but a strategic necessity鈥攆or education, diplomacy, the creative industries and the wider economy. The level of engagement we saw across both campuses speaks to a shared commitment to strengthening Ireland鈥檚 linguistic capacity, and to ensuring that future generations can thrive in an increasingly multilingual world."
This conference was very timely, given the introduction of a new Primary Languages Curriculum (PLC) published in September 2025 to be implemented in primary schools on a phased basis from September 2026. This new PLC includes Modern Foreign Languages in the primary curriculum for the first time. The event was highly important in the context of the current Language Strategy of the Government, Languages Connect (2017-2026) coming to an end next year and the many constructive ideas collected will be an excellent start to discussions about the successor strategy.


