2025 Language Teachers’ Conference

Here at the Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages, we are delighted to share details about this year’s Language Teachers’ Conference which will take place on Friday 26 and Saturday 27 September 2025 at Somerville College, Oxford.

Our annual conference has developed out of the Sir Robert Taylor Society (named after the founder of the Faculty’s Languages Library), a network of teachers of Modern Foreign Languages in secondary schools, academics from the Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages at the University of Oxford, and others interested in MFL.

2024 Teachers’ Conference

This conference is now a core aspect of the Faculty’s Schools Liaison work, and provides a unique forum for interaction and exchange between the University and teachers. It offers teachers the chance to spend a night in an Oxford college, to attend various taster lectures and discussions, and to ask our academics and admissions tutors questions about our courses, research, and supporting students’ applications to Oxford.

Conference Programme

2025 sees us re-invigorating our standard conference programme to make it more interactive and collaborative. For the first time, the Conference will have a theme – ‘Collaboration and Connections’ – which will underpin all of the sessions and talks that are taking place across the two days. We hope that, by creating more space for meaningful discussions, teacher-led content, and undergraduate student perspectives, the event will provide more useful opportunities for delegates and Faculty members to share best practice, network, and learn from one another.

We are pleased to be holding the conference at Somerville College once again after a successful event last year. Somerville was established in 1879 as a hall for women, who were barred from the university at the time, and throughout its history it has remained committed to equality. Today, Somerville marries beautiful architecture with a proud emphasis on inclusivity and diversity.

Prospective students and their families look around Somerville College

The full provisional event programme can be found here and more information about the conference is available here.

A particular highlight of this year’s programme is scheduled for Saturday morning – our ‘Collaboration carousel’ session will involve invited MFL teachers speaking about the exciting and innovative projects they have been working on within their school or local area to promote language learning.  

Delegate rates and booking

Below are the various rates and ticket options available for both state and independent school teachers.

State school rateIndependent school rate
Full conference, including accommodation and breakfast£150£300
Full conference, excluding accommodation£100£220
Friday only£50£110
Saturday only£50£110

Please visit our online bookings webpage to secure your place. You will need to create an account (or log in if you’ve used our website before) and select the right rate for your school type and length of attendance. Bookings will close on Monday 8th September.

We have a select number of fully subsidised places available for non-selective state schools. The Faculty has some funding set aside to cover the cost of the conference ticket and to reimburse reasonable travel expenses for teachers from these schools travelling to and from Oxford. Preference will be given to schools that either:

  • have never attended the conference before (or that have not attended in the last few years);
  • are located in areas of the country from which fewer students attend University;
  • have high proportions of students on Free School Meals.

If you wish to apply for one of these places, please fill in this very short form by Tuesday 1st July at midday.

If you have any questions or concerns, don’t hesitate to contact schools.liaison@mod-langs.ox.ac.uk.

We look forward to seeing you in September!

A German Classic Prize 2025 – Rainer Maria Rilke’s New Poems (Neue Gedichte)

The Oxford German Network are delighted to announce the launch of this year’s ‘A German Classic’- our annual essay competition for sixth-form students. This year we would like to invite you to read with us a selection of poems by Rainer Maria Rilke (1875 – 1926), widely regarded as one of the most important German-language poets.

In addition to our essay competition, we introduce a Discovery Section designed especially for those with no prior knowledge of German, making the competition more accessible than ever.

We have put together a free study pack, including a set of multimedia materials, that will help you delve into Rilke’s compelling poems, even if it’s the first time you’ve read a poem.

Source: The Poetry Foundation

Selected poems:

  • Der Panther (The Panther)
  • Das Einhorn (The Unicorn)
  • Jugend-Bildnis meines Vaters (Portrait of My Father as a Young Man)
  • Römische Fontäne (Roman Fountain)
  • Das Karussell (The Merry-Go-Round)
  • Spanische Tänzerin (Spanish Dancer)
  • Archaïscher Torso Apollos (Archaic Torso of Apollo)
  • Papageien-Park (The Parrot House)
  • Die Flamingos (The Flamingos)
  • Der Ball (The Ball)

Prizes:

Up to three prizes will be awarded for each section:

  • for the essay competition, we will award a first prize of £500, a second prize of £300, and a third prize of £100
  • for the discovery section, we will award a first prize of £200, a second prize of £100, and a third prize of £50.

Prizes will only be awarded if work is of sufficient merit. All entrants will receive a prize certificate or a certificate of participation.

Study Packs:

Throughout July, we will be publishing ideas for further reading and free multimedia resources, including a series of podcast episodes we recorded especially for this competition, on our website.

We also encourage all students interested in entering the competition to email their UK correspondence address to the Prize Coordinator Santhia Velasco Kittlaus (germanclassic@mod-langs.ox.ac.uk) by 12 noon on 10
July to receive a free study pack.

After 10 July, study packs will be posted for free to those who request them by this date. If you get in touch after this date, we cannot guarantee to post you a full pack, but we will email you a copy of the secondary literature reader.

Eligibility:

Entrants must fulfil the following requirements as of September 2025:

  • be beginning their final year of full-time study at a secondary school in the UK (upper sixth form, Year 13 or S6 in Scotland);
  • be between the ages of 16 and 18;
  • hold a GCSE, IGCSE or equivalent qualification (in German for the essay) offered in the UK;
  • be resident in the United Kingdom. Entrants are not, however, expected to have prior experience of studying German literature.

Entries can be submitted via two online forms — here and here. The deadline for submitting your entry is Monday 8th September at 12 noon.

More details about the prize — including essay questions, submission guidelines, judging criteria, and more — can be found here.

Viel Glück!

2025 Flash Fiction Competition Results

In December 2024, we launched our annual Flash Fiction competitions, which closed at the end of March. The competitions were open to students in Years 7 to 13, who were tasked with writing a short story of no more than 100 words in French and/or Spanish.

We had an incredible response, with entries coming in from all areas across the country! In total, we received over 1200 submissions across the two languages!

We would like to thank everyone who entered the competition and commend you all for your hard work and creativity in writing a piece of fiction in a different language. This is a challenging exercise, and a significant achievement – congratulations all!

We are delighted to be able to announce the winners, runners up, and highly commended entries for each language below. We will be publishing the stories over the summer so you can read them for yourselves.

French

In the Years 7-9 category, the winner is Alexandra Davies. The runners-up are Christian Thomas and Poppy Simblet.

The judges also identified the following entrants as highly commended: Tabitha Bridgeman, Sarwin Shangar, Ellie Malloch, Jemima James, Prem Patel, Dhilan Thanki, Laonie Caron, Silvia Herratt, and Eva Gracovia.

In the Years 10-11 category, the winner is Ayami Ginneliya. The runners-up are Benedict Onalo and Arthur Mourot.

The judges also identified the following entrants as highly commended: Maryam Zulqarnain, Will Eyre, Todd Graham, Zara Amjad, Faith Obum-Uchendu, Elizabella Macleay-Wood, Florence Datta, Izzy Anderson, Aayushi Dhelaria, and Antoinette Aluge.

In the Years 12-13 category, the winner is Sela Keliane Diasivi. The runner-ups are Nini Ren and Ka Kin Andreas Lam.

The judges also identified the following entrants as highly commended: Sofia McAllister, Dominica Kay-Shuttleworth, Eddie Henderson, Eva Saunders, Preona Mohan, Gia Namoa, Luke Roberts, Amelia Richardson, Andreea Denisa Taranu, and Annabelle Lavin.

The French judging panel were very impressed with this year’s submitted stories, and commented the following about all the entries:

Thank you all for another year of delightful and intriguing stories. In just a hundred words, you impressed us with pieces about family love, mischievous cats, talking music boxes, aeroplane fiascos, mysterious mirrors, alien invasions, snail restauranteurs, and doner kebabs. We particularly enjoyed the creative range of literary styles: verse poetry and prose, theatre and slang, riddles and tongue-twisters. Congratulations to all of you for your courage in experimenting with language in such fascinating ways.

Spanish

In the Years 7-9 category, the winner is Grace Fulcher. The runner up is Willa Stevenson.

The judges also identified the following entrants as highly commended: Qaya Anand, Benjamin Brown, Maria Temowo, Sai Sudharshana Sathish Kumar, Ella Gabso, Momore Sina-Atanda, Kimora Newby, Chloe Crowther, Jasparan Leeson-Kings, and Zaynah Arshad.

In the Years 10-11 category, the winner is Anonymous. The runners-up are Jaami Sheikh and Jaya Sharma Patel.

The judges also identified the following entrants as highly commended: Cecilia Linden, Anonymous, Anonymous, Tulaxsaa Sutharsan, Ilana Bartlette, Kashvi Maharshi, Isabel Marchi-Abatti, Jasmine Dix, Madeline Sandford, and Lalith Surapaneni.

In the Years 12-13 category, the winner is Gabriel Dada. The runners-up are Lydia Furniss and Ohemaa Ofosua Bruce Oppong-Agyare.

The judges also identified the following entrants as highly commended: Heloise Morel, Mahi Sainani, Melissa Muthama, Monica Singh, Thea Spackman, Yuet Ching Gabrielle Kam, Samiah Iqbal Kausar, Luke Roberts, Gagani Katugampala, and Amelie Pugsley.

The Spanish judging panel were very impressed with this year’s submitted stories, and commented the following about all the entries:

We greatly enjoyed reading all of this year’s entries and, as always, were impressed with the level of creativity and inventiveness. We particularly liked the stories that were playful with their perspectives and structure, which we could see had come from moments of personal thought and showcased different opinions and ways of seeing. It was wonderful to see a good command of Spanish throughout, as well as an ability to manipulate the language imaginatively.

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Huge congratulations everyone – you should be very proud of your achievement!