IGODO: Language, Education,
and Colonial Legacy

A public research hub exploring how colonial and institutional languages shape education, student development, and knowledge access.

Why Language Matters

Language is never neutral. The words used in classrooms, policy documents, and institutions carry the weight of history, shaping who belongs, who succeeds, and whose knowledge counts.

IGODO uses language as the entry point into a broader conversation about colonial education, institutional power, student identity, and access to knowledge. Experts and non-experts alike have something to teach and to learn here.

Learn More About IGODO
Scrabble letters spelling Language Matters

Where Would You Like to Start?

The project brings together research, video conversations, community voices, and events in one place.

About IGODO

About IGODO

Learn about the project, the team, and the values that guide this research.

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Research Themes

Research Themes

Explore the intellectual framework behind the project, covering six core areas of inquiry.

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Videos Library

Videos & Library

Watch interviews, research talks, and student discussions. Read papers and reflections.

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Community

Community

Hear from students, educators, and practitioners. Find upcoming events and get involved.

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Start Here

This conversation introduces the core questions driving the IGODO project.

Language, Power, and the Colonial Classroom

Professor Odugu introduces the central argument of the IGODO project: that the languages of colonial schooling continue to shape student identity, access, and belonging in educational institutions today.

🎤 Prof. Odugu 📅 2024 ▶ Research Talk
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Research Themes

Six areas of inquiry that anchor the IGODO project.

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Colonial Language in Schooling

How colonial-era languages became the medium of instruction and what that means for students today.

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Institutional Language & Power

The ways that bureaucratic and academic language reinforces or challenges institutional authority.

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Student Identity & Belonging

How students navigate language expectations and construct their sense of self within educational spaces.

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Educational Access & Outcomes

The relationship between language policy and who gets to access quality education and succeed within it.

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Community Knowledge & Expertise

Recognizing that non-expert and community knowledge is valid, valuable, and essential to this project.

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Language Policy & Cultural Continuity

How language policy decisions affect cultural identity, heritage, and the survival of local knowledge.

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Students Are Central to This Project

IGODO is not just about students. It is built with them. Student researchers contribute to conversations, reflections, and the ongoing development of the project's ideas.

Whether you are a student, educator, practitioner, or simply curious, there is a place for your voice here. This is a space where experts learn from non-experts too.

Join the Community Meet the Team
Student researcher involved in the IGODO project

What People Are Saying

Reflections from students, educators, and community members involved in the project.

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This project helped me understand why I always felt like an outsider in the classroom. It was never about my ability. It was about whose language was centered.

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Student Researcher Undergraduate, Education Studies

I came in as a practitioner thinking I had the answers. The conversations in this project reminded me how much I still have to learn from the communities I work with.

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Community Educator Practitioner Contributor

The question of language in schools is really a question about power. It is about who decides what counts as knowledge and who gets to speak it.

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Graduate Researcher PhD Candidate, Linguistics

Want to Contribute or Stay Updated?

IGODO welcomes students, researchers, educators, and community voices. Reach out to get involved or stay informed about new content and events.

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