When in class I once asked a group of teenage learners to name a famous scientist, every answer I received was male. Only when I showed them a picture of Rita Levi-Montalcini did one student whisper, “Oh yes, I know her.” That moment reminded me how easily the contributions and voices of women can fade into the background of what we teach and how important it is to make them visible again.
By women’s empowerment, we mean helping women and girls to recognize and claim their rights, their voices, and their ability to shape the world around them. At the same time, it involves engaging men and boys in questioning stereotypes, valuing equality, and becoming active allies. True empowerment is not about one group gaining at the expense of another, but about fostering confidence, agency, and equal opportunities for everyone, in both personal choices and public life.
Bringing this theme into the EFL classroom gives learners new perspectives, challenges stereotypes, and connects language learning to real-world issues. Through texts, videos, and discussions, students can explore stories of resilience and creativity, compare cultural views, and reflect on their own beliefs. Teaching women’s empowerment in this way nurtures empathy, critical thinking, and global citizenship.
One way to begin is by looking back at moments when women’s voices were marginalized. For example, when starting a chapter on the birth of the novel (Lifelines Literatures, p.14), students are asked to reflect on three guiding questions:
For the first question, it is common that students struggle to provide an answer. This highlights how women’s contributions have often been overlooked, creating a powerful teaching moment: historical silencing is visible in the gaps of students’ knowledge.
The third question often sparks the richest discussion. By asking all students, girls and boys alike, to imagine themselves in the position of a woman at that time, they consider both social barriers and the personal courage required to break through them. This imaginative exercise builds empathy and a deeper sense of how power and voice connect to literary history. As Claire Kramsch (2022) suggests, thought-provoking questions like these help language learners implicate themselves in the lives of others.
To bring women’s empowerment into our classrooms, I have structured a set of practical activities around three key areas that help learners recognize, reflect on, and actively practice equality and inclusion.
Empowerment starts with being seen and heard; recognizing women’s contributions historically and today.
Activities for young learners:
Activities for teenagers:
Language is never neutral. It can reinforce stereotypes, silence certain groups, or empower them. Teaching learners to notice and use language thoughtfully promotes gender equity.
Real-life examples:
Activities for young learners:
Activities for teenagers:
Empowerment involves society-wide participation; men and boys as allies are essential.
Activity for young learners:
Present simple situations where a girl is excluded from a game or activity, which is traditionally associated with boys. Children act out ways to include and support each other, emphasizing listening, empathy, and allyship.
Activities for teenagers:
Integrating these three areas, Visibility and Voice, Language and Power, and Alliances and social change, allows language teachers to develop lessons that are both linguistically and socially meaningful. From imagining the challenges women faced in literary history to reflecting on real-life role models, learners develop empathy, critical thinking, and global awareness.
Teaching women’s empowerment is not just about understanding achievements; it is about building classroom cultures where every voice is seen, heard, and valued, and where students of all genders can practice agency, solidarity, and equality in their everyday lives.
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