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Lesson 1 Clil Introduction

The document provides an overview of Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL). It discusses the background and benefits of CLIL, including that it is motivational, supports cognitive development, and prepares students for further education. It also outlines different degrees of CLIL from content-based language teaching to full immersion. The document then discusses key aspects of becoming an effective CLIL teacher and the pedagogical approaches that influence CLIL methodology, such as task-based learning and the lexical approach.

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Garrett
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© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
75 views

Lesson 1 Clil Introduction

The document provides an overview of Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL). It discusses the background and benefits of CLIL, including that it is motivational, supports cognitive development, and prepares students for further education. It also outlines different degrees of CLIL from content-based language teaching to full immersion. The document then discusses key aspects of becoming an effective CLIL teacher and the pedagogical approaches that influence CLIL methodology, such as task-based learning and the lexical approach.

Uploaded by

Garrett
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Introduction to CLIL:

Background
Teaching
• “Teaching is the art of assisting discovery.” Mark
van Doren
• “I cannot teach anybody anything, I can only make
them think.” Socrates
• “The greatest sign of success for a teacher ... is to
be able to say, “The children are now working as if
I did not exist.” Maria Montessori
• “We now accept the fact that learning is a lifelong
process … and the most pressing task is to teach
people how to learn.” Peter F. Drucker
The winds of change
• Post-method era of ‘principled
eclecticism’
• EFL course books based on general
English language
• Globalisation of English as the medium
of instruction in tertiary education
• Economic considerations
TENOR

• Rinvolucri (1999; 14) criticizes the “soft,


fudgy, sub-journalistic, women’s
magaziney world of EFLese course
materials”
Benefits of CLIL
• Motivational
• Cognitive development
• More comprehensive communication skills
• Larger relevant multimodal input
• Purposeful interaction
• Intercultural awareness
• Preparation for tertiary education / workplace
• Multiple intelligences and learning styles
CLIL
Language
Methodolog
Content y Language
teaching teaching
Degrees of L2
• CBLT:
teaching
• Language teaching using content generated topics and materials

• CLIL (Weak):
• Language teaching to support subject teachers

• CLIL (Strong):
• Content teaching and some language teaching. Teaching through
L2

• Immersion:
• Content teaching. Teaching in L2
Degrees of CLIL
• Content is king!
• There is no single, definitive CLIL methodology
• CLIL offers both content and language teachers
new pedagogic viewpoints and perspectives
• Teachers create their own version of CLIL
depending on their teaching style and theory of
learning
• Both content and language teachers already use
CLIL methodology in their classrooms to some
extent
CLIL

• “I would firstly suggest that CLIL is not a


matter of putting old wine in new
bottles. CLIL, to me, looks more like
putting old wine in old bottles and
slapping on a new label.” Neil McBeath
Phases of becoming a CLIL
teacher:
Phase 1
• The CLIL teacher is developing his / her
language skills
• A lot of L1 in the classroom

• Concentration on L2 lexis rather than extended text

• Tendency to teach from the front instead of using


pairwork / groupwork

• Uncertainty about using multimodal input in L2

• Learners find non-native speakers easier to


understand

• Non-native speakers understand language problems


facing students
Phases of becoming a CLIL teacher:
Phase 2
• Reassured about language skills
• Less concerned about making mistakes

• Developing learners’ vocabulary through records

• Recognition of aspects of language causing difficulties for


learners

• Increased repertoire of classroom activities to solve


difficulties
Phases of becoming a CLIL
teacher:
• Experienced Phase 3
• Less concerned about own language skills

• Input seen as more than vocabulary

• Material seen as language as well as content

• Genre differences recognised and skills practised through


diverse activities, support etc.

• Awareness of grading language in materials and appropriate


activities

• BICS and CALP

• L2 communication in all stages of lessons

• Feedback on language as well as content


CLIL Pedigree
• CLIL methodology flies in the face of current language
teaching practice
• English language teaching is an eclectic blend of
approaches and methods
• This blend reflects what teachers find workable in
the language classroom
• The following approaches and methods are all
central to CLIL yet they all failed to be adopted by
mainstream teaching
• The reason for this was exposure.
CLIL Pedigree
• The Natural Method
• Specialised Training
• Situational / Functional / Notional
• Communicative Approach
• The Natural Approach
• Task-Based Learning
• The Lexical Approach
• Humanism
• English for Academic Purposes
The Natural Method
• Saveur and Franke advocated using intensive oral
interaction using questions to present and elicit
language
• L2 use only
• Instruction through demonstration and action
• Direct and spontaneous use of L2
• Students induce grammar from the language
presented
• Systematic early attention to pronunciation
• Use mime, demonstration and pictures for
vocabulary
Army specialised
• training method
The US army introduced the “Army Method” to
train soldiers going to Europe during the Second
World War
• Soldiers needed conversational proficiency
• “Informant Method” used an L2 speaker to provide
a model for classroom practice and to take part in
conversations
• The teacher elicited L2 from the “informant”
• Intensive oral-based functional / situational
approach
• No developed methodological basis
SITUATIONAL -
FUNCTIONAL
• Objectives defined as communicative functions
• Communicative functions determine the
selection and sequencing of grammatical items
• Language practice derives from the functional
objectives rather than from structure
• Useful when learners need rapid progress in
functional variety (EAP)
• Can produce ‘language-like’ behaviour or
‘phrasebook’ language
COMMUNICATIVE
LANGUAGE
• Generally, the following precepts are true to all forms of
TEACHING
CLT:
• Learner centred (consideration of learning styles,
interests, needs, goals etc
• Direct practice with communicative acts
• Communication is more important than accuracy
• Language is interpersonal so pair / group work is
encouraged
• Grammar is inductive (noticing) rather than deductive
• Error correction is selective in terms of content and
timing
• The teacher can be a facilitator, independent participant,
needs analyst and counsellor
Communicative
Language Teaching
• Yalden’s CLT syllabus types:
• Structural-Functional
• Structures and Functions (functional spiral around a
structural core)
• Variable focus (structural, functional, instrumental)
• Functional
• Fully communicative
• Task-based
• Learner generated
FULLY
COMMUNICATIVE
• Acquisition and learning as independent as possible of the
teacher
• Linguistic competence is only a part of communicative
competence
• Teaching language via communication rather than
communication via language
• Teacher manages activities, learners solve communication
problems. Learning happens!
• Lead learners towards autonomy
• Negotiated syllabus of content and learning strategies
• Learners define objectives, choice of teaching techniques
The Natural
Approach
• The natural approach was strikingly different
from the mainstream approach in the United
States in the 1970s and early 1980s, the audio-
lingual method
• The natural approach is based on the idea of
enabling naturalistic language acquisition in the
language classroom;
• The natural approach puts less emphasis on
practice and more on exposure to language
input and on reducing learners' anxiety.
Stephen Krashen

• Natural Order Hypothesis


Acquisition-Learning
Hypothesis
• Acquisition = subconscious
• Learning = conscious
• Children acquire language better than
adults
Input hypothesis
• We acquire by comprehensible input (i)
+1
• Input Hypothesis relates to acquisition,
not learning
• Focus not on structure but on
understanding the message
• Do not teach structure deliberately; i+1
is provided naturally when input is
understood
• Production ability emerges. It’s not
taught directly
Affective Filter
Hypothesis
• Motivation
• Self-confidence
• Anxiety
• Lower affective filter means the learner
is more open to learning
The Natural
Approach syllabus
• Content (culture, subject matter, new
information, reading)
• Affective-humanistic (students' own
ideas, opinions, experiences)
• Problem solving (focus on using
language to locate information, use
information, etc.)
Task based learning

• Learning by doing
• Doing while learning
• Learning in order to do
• Learning while interacting
Task-Based Learning

• Communicative
• Zone of proximal development
• Functional language exponents
Task-Based Learning
• Reduce external ‘threats’
• Reduce internal ‘threats’
• Self-initiated learning is the most lasting and
pervasive.
• The student’s mind is most actively engaged when
solving problems and making discoveries (learning
heuristically).
• Because the student initiates and controls the
learning, this approach caters to individual needs.
• The student gets what he or she needs rather than
whatever the teacher happens to dish out.
Task-based learning
curriculum
- Student-centred,
- Experiential,
- Needs-based,
- Inductive,
- Heuristic,
- Autonomy-oriented
The Lexical Approach
• “Language consists not of traditional grammar and vocabulary
but often of multi-word prefabricated chunks” Lewis: 1997
• Fluency is the result of acquiring large numbers of chunks
• Combining elements of chunks leads to generation of new
language
• Exposure to enough input is the key to increasing the learner’s
lexicon
• Most vocabulary is acquired, not taught
• No systematic explanation of the language system
• Exposure and experimentation
• “All chunks and no pineapple” Thornbury: 1998
Humanism:
Motivation
• Intrinsic motivation comes from the following
influences:
• Enjoying the learning process
• Personal challenge
• Desire to become part of the L2
community
• Desire for personal betterment
• Curiosity
Humanism:
Motivation &
Achievement
• Success with effort motivates
• Success without effort demotivates
• Failure with effort demotivates
absolutely
Humanism:
• Students’ motivation can be maintained
Motivational Activities
and increased by giving them activities
that they enjoy doing.
• SLA and Psycholinguistic research
suggests that students have different
learning styles and sensory
preferences.
• We need to try to engage these
preferences by including activities that
we know will interest them.
• How can we discover these
preferences?
Humanism:
Learner differences
•What similarities between the students in your class can
you count on?
•Age?
•Culture?
•Language level?
•Interests?
•Needs?
•Intelligence?
•Physical presence?
Learner differences
• Intuition tells us that there are differences in
the way students learn. Some love role-
play, some love puzzles, some love musical
exercises.
• Intuition also tells us that different students
seem to profit more and less from different
exercises and activities in the classroom.
• If for nothing else, we know that varied
activities relieve the tedium of lessons and
energise students.
Learner differences:
VAKOG
•Neuro-linguistic programming suggests 5
“primary representational systems” to
experience the world:
• Visual (we look and see)
• Auditory (we hear and listen)
• Kinaesthetic & Tactile (we ‘feel’
through movement and touch)
• Olfactory (we smell things)
• Gustatory (we taste things)
Learner differences
Multiple intelligences
• verbal-linguistic
• logical-mathematical
• visual-spatial
• bodily-kinaesthetic
• musical-rhythmic
• Intrapersonal
• Interpersonal
• naturalistic
EAP

Cognitive skills
Remembering (list; name; recall; recite; recognise; relate; spell; state; tell),
• Ordering (What happens next? order; organise; sequence; rank),
• Defining (What is X? What is the function of . . .? analyse; define; describe; explain; identify;
outline; show; translate),
• Comparing – contrasting (What is X and what is not X? similarities and differences;
compare; contrast; distinguish; investigate),
• Dividing (What does X belong to? divide; separate; share; sort),
• Classifying (How many classes of X are there? classify; categorise; decide which group; put
into),
• Predicting (What will / would / could happen to X? predict; think about . . .; guess;
hypothesise),
• Reasoning (Why X? What causes X? What comes as a result of X? What justifies X to do Y?
choose; conclude; decide; explain; justify; recommend; solve),
• Creative thinking/synthesis (What if . . . ? imagine; build; change; compose; design; invent;
make up; plan; produce; suppose),
• Evaluating (What do you think about X? assess; give opinion; judge; rate; prove; what’s the
value of ...?)
Learning skills
• locating,
• organising and interpreting information;
• note taking, drafting;
• editing;
• guessing from context;
• processing and using knowledge;
• stating facts and opinions;
• transferring information;
• carrying out investigations;
• considering layout;
• recording results;
• reviewing;
• skimming and scanning skills;
• summarising
Information
processing skills
• Information-processing skills:
• Find and collect relevant information
• Organise information
• Sort / classify / sequence information
• Compare / contrast information
• Identify and analyse relationships
• Represent or communicate information
Reasoning skills
• Give reasons for opinions / actions
• Infer from observations, facts, experience
• Make conclusions
• Argue or explain a point of view
• Make informed judgments / decisions from
evidence
• Use precise language to explain what they think
• Explain cause and effect

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