“…Individuals' personal histories of migration, provenance, cultural and religious backgrounds, age, gender, and languages create opportunities for language and intercultural learning, and enrichment of the curriculum in educational contexts. However, these affordances and opportunities are challenged by state educational regimes that often prioritise and legitimise monolingual attitudes among teachers and learners (see Welply 2017): what Gogolin (1997) has defined as a monolingual habitus, which often leads to linguistic discrimination. In this context of unequal (linguistic) power relations, state education risks losing the hearts and minds of 'othered' learners who fall outside of the (linguistic) structures and curriculum of mainstream education (Bourdieu, 1991;Cummins, 2001;Giroux, 2004).…”