‘Beyond Words’ to open doors through French language exchange

The Eden Lodge Youth Charitable Trust, a community-focused nonprofit based in Barbados, has unveiled an innovative cross-cultural language exchange program called Beyond Words, which brings international university students directly into local classrooms to boost language proficiency and connect young people across borders.

Details of the new initiative were shared publicly at a press briefing hosted Thursday at St Paul’s Primary School on Brittons Cross Road, where the trust’s public relations lead Billie-June Langdon explained the program originated from a planned internship for Luxon Warner, a business student at EXCELIA Business School based in Orléans, France. Recognizing that Warner’s placement through the French Humacité Programme represented more than just a standard internship opportunity, the trust designed the Beyond Words initiative to advance a set of core goals: expand accessible cultural exchange opportunities, empower youth to engage globally, drive inclusive community development, build global awareness among local students, and foster authentic, long-lasting connections between young people from different cultural backgrounds.

In its pilot first year, the program has partnered with two Barbadian schools: St Paul’s Primary School and St Leonard’s Boys’ Secondary School. Warner has led customized conversational French classes at both institutions, adapting content and activities to match the varying age groups and language proficiency levels of participating students.

Andrew Lokey, a modern languages teacher at St Leonard’s Boys’ Secondary School, noted that the program’s impact extends far beyond basic language instruction. Over the four-week pilot, Lokey observed that the shared age proximity between the 20-year-old French visitor and the 15 and 16-year-old secondary school students created a natural, relaxed camaraderie that enhanced learning far beyond what a standard curriculum can offer.

Lokey emphasized that access to a native French speaker gave students an immersive experience impossible to replicate in a traditional, teacher-led classroom. “Students got to hear and practice natural, authentic conversational French in real time, which is an irreplaceable learning tool,” he explained. The program also delivered tangible academic benefits for students preparing for their Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC) exams, with Warner able to walk students through complex grammatical concepts in clear, detailed terms that reinforced their exam preparation.

Most notably, Lokey observed a marked improvement in student engagement and confidence. Even students who had previously shown limited interest in French became more motivated to practice and improve their skills week over week, with Warner’s consistent encouragement driving measurable progress.

For Warner himself, the exchange has been just as transformative. Calling the experience his first extended stay in a foreign country, he explained that stepping outside his comfort zone – navigating daily life independently without family nearby – helped him grow personally and professionally. While helping Barbadian students build their French skills, Warner also worked to improve his own English proficiency, noting that daily interactions with local students and staff helped him overcome initial nervousness about speaking in a new language. He expressed hope that he would return to Barbados to continue the program in the future and extended his gratitude to the Eden Lodge Youth Charitable Trust for the opportunity.

At St Paul’s Primary School, the pilot program introduced French to young learners through dynamic, activity-based methods that made the new language fun and accessible. Eleven-year-old Class Four student Davonte Jordan shared that the interactive lessons – which included vocabulary games for weather terms, body parts, and city locations, as well as a French-language version of Simon Says that got students moving around the classroom – made learning feel engaging rather than intimidating. The positive early experience has already sparked a lasting interest: Jordan said he plans to continue studying French when he moves on to secondary school.

St Paul’s Primary Principal Joan Collymore praised the initiative for the unique opportunities it brought to her students. “Over the course of the program, our students benefited tremendously from conversational classes led by Luxon. The lessons were engaging, well-received, and his consistent enthusiasm kept kids inspired from start to finish,” Collymore said. While the pilot program ran only a few weeks, she added that it delivered long-term value, creating meaningful learning experiences and strengthening the critical partnership between the school and local community to support the development of well-rounded, globally aware students.

Organizers of Beyond Words noted that the initiative aligns with the Eden Lodge Youth Charitable Trust’s core mission of youth empowerment, expanded educational access, and community service. The pilot program has already demonstrated that targeted international collaboration can not only improve language learning outcomes for students but also build confidence, cross-cultural understanding, and genuine people-to-people connections between young people from different parts of the world.