Teaching and learning through Englishclassroom strategies and practices in CLIL

  1. Villabona, Nerea
Dirigida por:
  1. Miren Jasone Cenoz Iragui Director/a

Universidad de defensa: Universidad del País Vasco - Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea

Fecha de defensa: 31 de marzo de 2020

Tribunal:
  1. Juan Etxeberria Murgiondo Presidente/a
  2. Rosa María Jiménez Catalán Secretaria
  3. Christine Hélot Vocal

Tipo: Tesis

Teseo: 152331 DIALNET lock_openADDI editor

Resumen

The education system in the Basque Autonomous Community (BAC) is making efforts in moving from bilingualism to multilingualism by offering subjects taught through the foreign language, which is most of the times English. The aim of this study is to explore the way English-medium subjects are implemented in Secondary School in the BAC. More specifically, it describes how teachers integrate language and content in their classrooms, and how they manage to make content comprehensible when using English as the medium of instruction. It also seeks to investigate the presence of the students¿ and teachers¿ multilingual repertoire in CLIL lessons. For that, this study takes a qualitative approach. This is a multiple-case study where four classes taught through English are analyzed. Data was collected through classroom observations, semi-structured interviews with the four CLIL teachers and classroom documents. Findings show how different teachers¿ backgrounds have an effect on the implementation of these programs: the teachers who have a content-teaching background exclude themselves from the responsibility of ¿teaching¿ the foreign language and tend to focus on content-matter only while those with a language-teaching background show more language awareness and see themselves as language and content facilitators. These teachers also show more strategies to make content comprehensible, among others. Classroom realities also show the potential of translanguaging, used with a pedagogical purpose, in these CLIL settings. // The education system in the Basque Autonomous Community (BAC) is making efforts in moving from bilingualism to multilingualism by offering subjects taught through the foreign language, which is most of the times English. The aim of this study is to explore the way English-medium subjects are implemented in Secondary School in the BAC. More specifically, it describes how teachers integrate language and content in their classrooms, and how they manage to make content comprehensible when using English as the medium of instruction. It also seeks to investigate the presence of the students¿ and teachers¿ multilingual repertoire in CLIL lessons. For that, this study takes a qualitative approach. This is a multiple-case study where four classes taught through English are analyzed. Data was collected through classroom observations, semi-structured interviews with the four CLIL teachers and classroom documents. Findings show how different teachers¿ backgrounds have an effect on the implementation of these programs: the teachers who have a content-teaching background exclude themselves from the responsibility of ¿teaching¿ the foreign language and tend to focus on content-matter only while those with a language-teaching background show more language awareness and see themselves as language and content facilitators. These teachers also show more strategies to make content comprehensible, among others. Classroom realities also show the potential of translanguaging, used with a pedagogical purpose, in these CLIL settings.