0000000000264092

AUTHOR

Ana Halbach

showing 2 related works from this author

Knowledge ecology for conceptual growth:Teachers as active agents in developing a PluriLiteracies approach to Teaching for Learning (PTL)

2017

This article explores how a group of educators and researchers enacted an inclusive process of conceptual growth involving teachers and teacher educators as active agents, knowledge builders and meaning-makers in the development of a Pluriliteracies approach to Teaching for Learning (PTL). The evolution of a working model based on five emergent principles, foregrounded the need for stakeholders across different languages, cultures and disciplines, to work together from the start so that learning spaces were created where teacher development went alongside researcher development, and theorizing was not only inclusive of praxis but validated by it. A growth cycle emerged using theories of pra…

060201 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and Languagecontent and language integrated learning (CLIL) dynamic growth cycleecological co-constructed knowledge building for educator learningBilingual educationEcology (disciplines)Education theoryDiscourse analysisTeaching method05 social sciences050301 education06 humanities and the artsLanguage and LinguisticsEducationteacher theories of practicepluriliteracies teaching for learning (PTL)Cultural diversity0602 languages and literaturePedagogyComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATIONSociologyFaculty developmentEnglish for academic purposes0503 education
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A pluriliteracies approach to content and language integrated learning – mapping learner progressions in knowledge construction and meaning-making

2015

Over the past decades content and language integrated learning (CLIL) research has predominantly focused on the language proficiency of CLIL learners. The results are very promising and show that working language skills in learners, especially reading and listening skills, can be improved through a CLIL programme. Studies focusing on subject learners are still few but they indicate that learners maintain or under certain conditions can improve their subject learning when compared to learners learning in L1. However, more recent studies have raised challenging questions concerning academic language competence which indicate that CLIL instruction may not be reaching its full potential. Unrave…

Linguistics and LanguageFirst languageTeaching methodWorking languageLanguage and LinguisticsEducationEducational researchContent and language integrated learningPedagogyComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATIONLearning theoryLanguage proficiencyPsychologyCompetence (human resources)Language, Culture and Curriculum
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