Httner and Dalton-Puffer present research demonstrating the tangible benefits of the long-term sustainability of Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) on participants' educational outcomes. The chapters outline the argument that the main benefit of CLIL lies in the fact that learners acqui
Building Disciplinary Literacies in Content and Language Integrated Learning (Routledge Series in Language and Content Integrated Teaching & Plurilingual Education)
✍ Scribed by Julia Hüttner (editor), Christiane Dalton-Puffer (editor)
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Year
- 2024
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 240
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Hüttner and Dalton present research demonstrating the tangible benefits of the long-term sustainability of Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) on participants’ educational outcomes.
The chapters outline the argument that the main benefit of CLIL lies in the fact that learners acquire specific literacy practices linked to the curricular subjects they study via the CLIL language and that these go beyond what is commonly learned and studied within a foreign language curriculum. The book provides an orientation as to how such disciplinary literacy or literacies can be conceptualised and understood, and introduces several models that have served to make disciplinary literacies graspable and visible. The various chapters showcase research and development projects from different geographical and educational contexts and therefore elaborate ideas around disciplinary literacies from different vantage points.
This book aims at a wide and varied readership, including graduate students studying applied linguistics, foreign language education, and/or teaching methodology; language teachers; content subject teachers with an interest in the linguistic side of their subject; and teacher trainers.
✦ Table of Contents
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
List of figures and tables
List of contributors
1. Introduction: The conceptualisation of disciplinary literacies in CLIL
PART I: Observing disciplinary literacies in action
2. Students’ depictive gestures in CLIL classroom interaction: A manifestation of subject-specific knowledge
3. CLIL learners’ categorizations: Writing about history in English across three grade levels in Spanish bilingual schools
PART II: Making disciplinary literacies assessable
4. A functional description of disciplinary literacy in history: Applications of the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages to content and language integrated learning courses
5. Assessing CLIL students’ expression of Explore across languages and school disciplines: An interdisciplinary approach
PART III: Disciplinary literacy awareness and pedagogy
6. Disciplinary literacy in a university German programme
7. “The science of it …” – the potential of cognitive discourse functions for an integrative CLIL pedagogy
8. Designing materials for building subject-specific literacies: Secondary-level chemistry
9. Cognitive discourse functions in history CLIL education: Insights from a design-based research study on conceptual links
Postscript
10. Unpacking disciplinary literacies
Index
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