Rapid technological, social and linguistic change is reshaping language education and research. In this piece, Prof John Traxler reflects on Avallain’s collaboration with the TISLID conference series (Technological Innovation for Specialized Linguistic Domains), exploring the limits of traditional, stable frameworks and considering why more adaptive, responsive models are increasingly necessary. This article also highlights the importance of sustained dialogue between researchers and education technology developers in translating research into practice.
Language Education and Technology in Times of Rapid Change: Ahead of the TISLID Conference
Author: Prof John Traxler, UNESCO Chair, Commonwealth of Learning Chair and Academic Director of the Avallain Lab
St. Gallen, January 16, 2026 – Language as a whole, language learning and digital education are evolving faster than ever, and all three are becoming more and more inextricably mixed as digital technologies, especially AI, become cheaper, easier and widely accessible, and societies become more and more global, connected, changeable and mobile.
This means that relevant research must not only be conducted quickly and effectively, but also disseminated and applied equally quickly and effectively, applied to technical development and pedagogic delivery, and extended beyond research communities. So the interface between academic research communities and the edtech sector needs to be effective and responsive, but it has its problems.
The Limits of Traditional Publishing
Publications, meaning books and journals, used to be the gold standard, their trustworthiness and relevance guaranteed by peer review processes conducted blind by expert reviewers. These are now less widely used, in general, because the rapidity of technical, educational and social change means they struggle to keep up, especially books, and they have very limited readership.
Research journals have their own unique problems; over the last decade, pressure from research funders, both UK and EU, has insisted on ‘open’ publication, meaning research journals must be freely available to any interested reader, no paywall, no subscription, no restrictions. This, however, has disrupted the publishers’ business model, which previously relied on libraries and readers paying to read. So now publishers must derive their income from writers, not readers, and introduce an APC (author processing charge) of several hundred to several thousand euros or dollars.
Professional researchers are, of course, still under the systemic pressure from their institutions to ‘publish or perish’ in order to increase their institutional rankings, and so ‘predatory journals’ emerge with dubious credentials and dubious quality assurance, happy to publish very quickly on receipt of the appropriate APC. AI has only amplified these problems, partly because of the rapidly increasing volume of AI research to be published and partly because some of it is probably specious, written by AI. This account is a slight simplification; there are exceptions to each of these assertions, but the general direction of travel is as described.
Responding to Change: Avallain Lab and the Importance of Dialogue
This state of affairs was, incidentally, one of the reasons for establishing the Avallain Lab, namely, creating a more responsive and trustworthy interface between research and the company, and building in expertise and experience as publication becomes less straightforward.
In turn, this shift means that the other medium of dissemination, namely gatherings, meaning seminars and conferences, becomes correspondingly more important.
This leads us to our collaboration with an upcoming conference on shared interests, including language, learning and digital technologies. The conference is one of the TISLID series in Spain, ‘Technological Innovation for Specialized Linguistic Domains’, a long-running conference series hosted by the ATLAS research group, ‘Applying Technology to Languages’, in UNED, Spain’s national distance learning university, based in Madrid. It takes place in Úbeda, Spain, from the 22nd to the 24th April 2026.
Rethinking Language Teaching and Linguistic Research in a Liquid World
The conference series aims to foster interdisciplinary dialogue among teachers, researchers and professionals on how to rethink language teaching and linguistic research in a liquid world, as Zygmunt Bauman’s theory suggests, a world never stable long enough to comprehend and is characterised by change, uncertainty and digitalisation.
‘Language Research and Education in Fluid Times: The Rise of Adaptive Competences’ is the conference theme for the next iteration. It focuses on the study, teaching and learning of languages, contextualised within a world in a constant and vertiginous state of evolution and transformation, of identity as well as relationships. This world is driven by multilingual needs and conditioned by globalisation, digital technology, mobility and artificial intelligence.
The title aims to suggest how human activity must adapt to unprecedentedly dynamic contexts in which linguistic, cultural, technological and communicative boundaries are increasingly blurred. In these contexts, human beings face uncertainty, diversity and new realities, some unforeseen, many ephemeral, that demand solutions that are both ethical and open, innovative and adaptive, hybrid and transdisciplinary.
The Rise of Adaptive Competence
In response to these conditions, the concept of adaptive competence becomes central. Rooted in soft or transversal skills, adaptive competence encompasses abilities such as cognitive flexibility, communicative resilience, digital and media literacy and intercultural competence.
The conference reflects a probable paradigm shift in language education and research, namely one that moves from stable, prescriptive frameworks toward fluid, adaptive models better aligned with the complexities and transformations of contemporary societies. With such a shift, edtech developers and the edtech sector clearly need to be closely and frequently listening to researchers and their findings. Avallain is pleased to be working with this community of researchers and to be involved in its conference and its publications as part of an ongoing mission to lead the sector in translating research into action.
About Avallain
For more than two decades, Avallain has enabled publishers, institutions and educators to create and deliver world-class digital education products and programmes. Our award-winning solutions include Avallain Author, an AI-powered authoring tool, Avallain Magnet, a peerless LMS with integrated AI, and TeacherMatic, a ready-to-use AI toolkit created for and refined by educators.
Our technology meets the highest standards with accessibility and human-centred design at its core. Through Avallain Intelligence, our framework for the responsible use of AI in education, we empower our clients to unlock AI’s full potential, applied ethically and safely. Avallain is ISO/IEC 27001:2022 and SOC 2 Type 2 certified and a participant in the United Nations Global Compact.
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