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Autori principali: Moletsane, Phenyo Phemelo, Asher, Michael W., Kwon, Christine, Carvalho, Paulo F., Ogan, Amy
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2026
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.03675
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author Moletsane, Phenyo Phemelo
Asher, Michael W.
Kwon, Christine
Carvalho, Paulo F.
Ogan, Amy
author_facet Moletsane, Phenyo Phemelo
Asher, Michael W.
Kwon, Christine
Carvalho, Paulo F.
Ogan, Amy
contents Most learners worldwide are multilingual, yet implementing multilingual education remains challenging in practice. EdTech offers an opportunity to bridge this gap and expand access for linguistically diverse learners. We conducted a quasi-experiment in Uganda with 2,931 participants enrolled in a non-formal radio- and mobile-based engineering course, where learners self-selected instruction in Leb Lango (a local language), English, or a Hybrid option combining both languages. The Leb Lango version of the course was used disproportionately by learners from rural areas, those with less formal education, and those with lower prior knowledge, broadening participation among disadvantaged learners. Moreover, the availability of Leb Lango instruction was associated with higher active participation, even among learners who registered for English instruction. Although Leb Lango learners began with lower performance, they demonstrated faster learning gains and achieved comparable final examination outcomes to English and Hybrid learners. These results suggest that providing local language options to learners is an effective way to make EdTech more accessible.
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id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_03675
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Inclusive Mobile Learning: How Technology-Enabled Language Choice Supports Multilingual Students
Moletsane, Phenyo Phemelo
Asher, Michael W.
Kwon, Christine
Carvalho, Paulo F.
Ogan, Amy
Human-Computer Interaction
Most learners worldwide are multilingual, yet implementing multilingual education remains challenging in practice. EdTech offers an opportunity to bridge this gap and expand access for linguistically diverse learners. We conducted a quasi-experiment in Uganda with 2,931 participants enrolled in a non-formal radio- and mobile-based engineering course, where learners self-selected instruction in Leb Lango (a local language), English, or a Hybrid option combining both languages. The Leb Lango version of the course was used disproportionately by learners from rural areas, those with less formal education, and those with lower prior knowledge, broadening participation among disadvantaged learners. Moreover, the availability of Leb Lango instruction was associated with higher active participation, even among learners who registered for English instruction. Although Leb Lango learners began with lower performance, they demonstrated faster learning gains and achieved comparable final examination outcomes to English and Hybrid learners. These results suggest that providing local language options to learners is an effective way to make EdTech more accessible.
title Inclusive Mobile Learning: How Technology-Enabled Language Choice Supports Multilingual Students
topic Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.03675