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Esperantic Studies Foundation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Esperantic Studies Foundation, abbreviated ESF, is a non-profit organisation initiated in 1968 by Jonathan Pool, E. James Lieberman and Humphrey Tonkin, with the aim to further the understanding and practice of linguistic justice in a multicultural world, with a special focus on the study of interlinguistics and the role of Esperanto. ESF's current president is Humphrey Tonkin.

The interlinguistic support fund

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Together with the Center for Research and Documentation (CED), Foundation to support Esperanto and interlinguistics, ESF (Esperantic Studies Foundation) invites proposals for research grants to assist scholars and graduate students in conducting and publishing research in such fields as language planning, interlinguistics, transnational language policy, linguistic justice, and 'planned languages'[1] (including Esperanto)[2]

ESF has funded hundreds of different projects including the development of the educational websites lernu.net, a website to learn Esperanto and edukado.net, a website for teachers and learners of Esperanto, Tekstaro.com, a text corpus of Esperanto, Summer Esperanto Workshop in Europe (SES), North American Summer Esperanto Institute (NASK) to promote the continued study of Esperanto in the United States. ESF continues to support the Esperanto edition of UNESCO Courier, the Conference on the Application of Esperanto in Science and Technology (KAEST),[3] as well as the postgraduate studies of interlinguistics and esperantology at Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan, Poland and the Chair of Esperanto and Interlinguistics at the University of Amsterdam.[4]

ESF sponsors also a number of other events, including the Nitobe Symposia, a conference series on world language problems that bring together activists, academics and politicians. as well as a series of symposia on language and development in New York aimed at raising the awareness of the United Nations about the importance of language equality for human development and human rights.[citation needed]

ESF also sponsored the creation of the documentary film The Universal Language, and produced the video course Esperanto—Pasporto al la Tuta Mondo (available on YouTube).[citation needed]

ESF also helped to establish official Esperanto examinations in accordance with the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages.[citation needed]

Esperanto "Access To Language Education" Award

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Esperantic Studies Foundation,[5] Lernu.net[6] and CALICO (Computer Assisted Language Instruction Consortium),[7][5] yearly present the Esperanto "Access To Language Education" Award, abbreviated ALE Award for the best non-commercial website offering outstanding resources for language learning.[citation needed]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Planned languages are created by an intentional intellectual effort, usually with the aim of facilitating interlinguistic communication.
  2. ^ The interlinguistic support fund, ESF.
  3. ^ Happy Birthday, ESF!
  4. ^ 50 years of excellence: honoring ESF, Esperantic Studies Foundation.
  5. ^ a b Esperanto Access to Language Education Award, Calico.org, 25 July 2007.  
  6. ^ 2008 Esperanto "Access to Language Education" Award, credit University of California.
  7. ^ CALICO is the most important American organisation in the field of computer assisted language learning (CALL).
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