Uruguayan department of education now allows the use of inclusive language in the classroom officially as long as the professors of said subject agree/don’t mind. We’re getting there (they’re just making a debate on it in national TV)

dasakuryo:

dumbassrights:

nice nice nice!! that also its getting more attention here, i’m not sure what’s happening in schools but my aunt asked me information about that and she’s a high school teacher, so this is def getting attention

It’s definitely gaining traction, and there are teachers and professors pushing for its inclusion on daily classroom dialogue/t-s talk/etc. But (there’s always a but, smh) problems arises when other teachers/professors clash and argue it’s not “proper” language to be taught at school, either they argue because its use isn’t widespread or that it isn’t “accepted” by academies of languages (usually they refer to RAE, which is also why RAE’s prescriptivism is so harmful but that’s another can of worms).