0000000000157075

AUTHOR

Christiane Dalton-puffer

0000-0001-6453-0850

showing 3 related works from this author

Content and language integrated learning

2014

This special issue of The Language Learning Journal is devoted to Content and Language Integrated Learning, frequently referred to by its acronym CLIL in Europe, but also elsewhere of late. CLIL is...

Linguistics and LanguageUniversal Networking LanguageContent and language integrated learningComputer scienceEducational technologyta516ta6121AcronymLanguage acquisitionLanguage and LinguisticsLinguisticsEducationThe Language Learning Journal
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CLIL classroom discourse

2013

Under the label of Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) the teaching of curriculum subjects through the medium of a foreign language has become a widely accepted feature in mainstream education systems in Europe and other parts of the world. After contextualizing its subject matter in CLIL research as a whole, this article focuses on research into classroom discourse. In order to unravel the complexities involved, three different takes on CLIL classroom discourse are discussed as an evidence-base for (a) language learning, (b) language use and social-interactional aspects of L2-interaction, and (c) processes of knowledge construction in and through a second or foreign language. T…

Linguistics and LanguageContent and language integrated learningLanguage assessmentComprehension approachForeign languagePedagogyMainstreamLanguage educationPsychologyLanguage acquisitionCurriculumLanguage and LinguisticsEducationJournal of Immersion and Content-Based Language Education
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“You Can Stand Under My Umbrella”: Immersion, CLIL and Bilingual Education. A Response to Cenoz, Genesee & Gorter (2013)

2014

Classrooms the world over are full of people who, for different reasons, are learning additional languages and/or are studying through languages that are not their first. Gaining insight into such contexts is complicated for researchers and practitioners alike by the myriad of contextual variables that come with different implementations and make comparison and generalization a tricky business. We welcome Cenoz et al.’s (2013) article as an important contribution to the debate on how best to tackle this problem. In this Forum piece we would like to, however, redress the balance on two issues: the fact that terminologies have histories and the emphases on the research agenda suggested for fu…

Linguistics and LanguageVocabularyoppiminenBilingual educationCLILCommunicationTeaching methodmedia_common.quotation_subjectRedressta6121Integrated curriculumLanguage and LinguisticsContent and language integrated learningvieraskielinen opetusContextual variablebilingual educationPedagogykieletta516SociologyImplementationmedia_common
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