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Journal ArticleDOI

Content-and-Language Integrated Learning: From Practice to Principles?

Christiane Dalton-Puffer
- 01 Mar 2011 - 
- Vol. 31, pp 182-204
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TLDR
The authors surveys recent work on content-and-language integrated learning (CLIL) for contexts where the classroom provides the only site for learners' interaction in the target language, and synthesizes research on learning outcomes in CLIL.
Abstract
This article surveys recent work on content-and-language integrated learning (CLIL). Related to both content-based instruction and immersion education by virtue of its dual focus on language and content, CLIL is here understood as an educational model for contexts where the classroom provides the only site for learners’ interaction in the target language. That is, CLIL is about either foreign languages or lingua francas. The discussion foregrounds a prototypical CLIL context (Europe) but also refers to work done elsewhere. The first part of the discussion focuses on policy issues, describing how CLIL practice operates in a tension between grassroots decisions and higher order policymaking, an area where European multi- and plurilingual policies and the strong impact of English as a lingua franca play a particularly interesting role. The latter is, of course, of definite relevance also in other parts of the world. The second part of the article synthesizes research on learning outcomes in CLIL. Here, the absence of standardized content testing means that the main focus is on language-learning outcomes. The third section deals with classroom-based CLIL research and participants’ use of their language resources for learning and teaching, including such diverse perspectives as discourse pragmatics, speech acts, academic language functions, and genre. The final part of the article discusses theoretical underpinnings of CLIL, delineating their current state of elaboration as applied linguistic research in the area is gaining momentum.

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Citations
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English as a medium of instruction - a growing global phenomenon

Julie Dearden
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a global view of English Medium Instruction (EMI) in schools and universities, based on a survey conducted with British Council staff acting as informed respondents and covering 55 countries.

The Input Hypothesis及其在外语教学中的应用

任耀
TL;DR: It is confirmed that the Sccond Languagc Acquisition contract will be extended to three tranches, with an option for a fourth tranche.
Journal ArticleDOI

English-medium instruction in Chinese higher education: a case study

TL;DR: In this article, a case study of an English-medium instruction (EMI) program for undergraduate students at a major university of finance and economy in mainland China is presented, where the authors make a critical analysis of national/institutional policy statements and interviews with professors and students to uncover EMI-related language ideologies, language practices, and language management mechanisms.
Journal ArticleDOI

CLIL: Some of the reasons why … and why not

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors suggest that there are a number of implicit reasons for the adoption of CLIL, the most obvious being student selection, which diverts attention away from the shortcomings of mainstream FL teaching in state schools and the plight of numerous non-CLIL students.
References
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Book

The Input Hypothesis: Issues and Implications

TL;DR: Langs as discussed by the authors presents strategies which teachers might use to teach on the trans-cultural field of discourse which Gumperz helps us to understand, and these strategies can help teachers to tailor their actions from day to day to the extent of their evolving understanding of this field.
Book

Language, Power And Pedagogy: Bilingual Children in the Crossfire

Jim Cummins
TL;DR: This paper revisited research, theory and policy in bilingual education - evaluating the credibility of empirical data challenging the discourse of disempowerment through critical dialogue transformative pedagogy, and the nature of language proficiency: language proficiency in academic contexts.
Book

Sociocultural Theory and Second Language Learning

TL;DR: In this article, sociocultural contributions to understanding the foreign and second language classroom are discussed, with a focus on how learners position themselves in a psycholinguistic task.
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