Assessment and Evaluation
Assessment and Evaluation
Assessment and Evaluation
www.aeclil.net.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Pag.
Preface,
John Clegg
7
Fabrizio Maggi
18
Teaching and Learning with CLIL, Franca Quartapelle and Bettina Schameitat
29
38
57
75
87
97
Redox Reactions: a way to produce energy, Cristiana Merli and Katia Maculotti
102
109
Nutrition,
117
Inese Barkovska
128
134
145
153
APPENDIX
Checklist
Student questionnaire
Teacher questionnaire
Teacher self-evaluation questionnaire
160
163
168
171
AUTHORS
175
50
51
52
53
68
70
84
93
100
106
116
122
123
123
131
131
132
140
149
151
PREFACE
John Clegg
In Europe we are now familiar with Content and Language Integrated Learning, or
CLIL. We have been doing it for some 25 years. We do it in most European countries.
We differ a lot in the way we interpret and implement it. Some countries and education
authorities do it more than others, and are more experienced than others. But
governments and the EU seem to approve of it, for a variety of educational reasons.
And stakeholders seem to like it: wherever it happens, teachers, learners and parents
tend largely to be positive about it.
However, we dont quite agree on what it is. We know that it is a way of combining
subject and foreign language (FL) learning, but we still have differing views, for
example, as to its purpose: whether it is primarily an exercise in learning subjects, or in
becoming more fluent in a language. Some CLIL programmes are taught by subject
teachers, some by language teachers and some by both. And crucially the amount of
curriculum time which learners devote to it varies radically from say 3 years plus of a
subject taught 100% in a FL to 20 weeks of a subject taught 30% in a FL. The
difference between these two programmes is so great as to cast doubt on whether we
can call both CLIL. But we do.
The AECLIL project is testimony not only to the wide range of countries and
educational contexts in which we do CLIL in Europe, but also to the range of subjects
and levels of schooling in which we do it. The project highlights in particular an area of
CLIL which we do not know enough about: assessment. Assessing in CLIL is not easy.
It throws up critical questions. Let us mention some. Firstly if the programme is
supposed to develop learners knowledge of the FL as well as curricular contents, should
both be assessed? Secondly, if the learners are learning a subject through the medium of
a language in which they are not fluent as is often the case can we ask them to
demonstrate subject knowledge in that language, or might that lack of fluency prevent
them from showing clearly enough what they know? Thirdly, if we want subject teachers
to assess learner performance in a course which they have taught in a FL, do they feel
themselves qualified to do that, especially if they are not wholly confident in that
language themselves? And fourthly, what assessment tools are the most useful for
measuring performance in subjects learned in FL?
One such assessment tool is the bandscale: a set of performance descriptors which
allow the teacher to rank a piece of student performance on several sub-skills of a given
task, using a pre-constructed scale. This is what the AECLIL project has focussed on. A
bandscale allows the teacher to assess together in one assessment tool a range of subskills which the learner uses indivisibly when performing a complex learning task. It
ranks performance on each of these sub-skills, using a scale which contains several
levels (say 5 or 10), but maintains the integrity of the students performance by
combining all the skills together within each level of the scale. Thus one level of the
scale will give a measure of the learners combined performance on all the sub-skills.
This is particularly useful in CLIL, where performance is very obviously the combined
result of two key elements, namely FL and subject knowledge, as well as perhaps a
combination of several further components of a subject-specific task, such as those
which the learner will use in, for example, conducting a scientific experiment (e.g.
predicting outcomes, conducting the experiment, reporting results and drawing
conclusions). It may also enable the teacher to note the degree to which the learner
needs support especially language support when performing the task in the FL.
The bandscale thus has several advantages, especially in CLIL. It allows the teachers
if they wish (and of course not all CLIL teachers do) to give a combined grade for
language skill and subject knowledge, as well as allowing them to assess other sub-skills
of the task, again if they wish to do so. It may also avoid some of the pitfalls of some
conventional assessment tools when used in CLIL. Long-answer questions, for example,
may well disadvantage the learner who has good knowledge of the subject but poor
productive language skills and cannot therefore easily demonstrate that subject
knowledge in inaccurate or inappropriate extended writing in the FL. The bandscale
may also reassure the subject teacher to a degree that they are able to give a grade
without making heavy demands on what they may feel to be their own insecure
command of the FL.
However, bandscales have their disadvantages. Firstly they require careful
construction. The assessor must first decompose the task to be assessed into its
component skills. They must then rank each skill on the scale to be used and devise a
descriptor for each rank of each skill, giving a set of sub-scales for that skill. Finally they
have to re-combine all sub-scales together, to form a combined descriptive statement
for each rank of the overall scale. The resulting draft instrument must then be trialled by
several users to see if they feel that it enables them to rank a learners performance on
the relevant combination of skills, on one scale. The instrument is likely to undergo
revisions before all the users feel that this is the case. In addition, a bandscale clearly
does not absolve the teachers from making an assessment of the learners performance:
they have to observe what the learner does using the FL and translate it in their
mind onto a rank of the bandscale. This is a fairly intuitive act; there is plenty of room
for difference between assessors, and again a group of colleagues will have to apply the
scale and discuss the way they have done so together before they can be sure that they
are using roughly similar judgements.
Finally the scale will not allow the teacher easily to separate a learners performance
into distinct sub-skills on the contrary the point of the scale is to combine sub-skills.
If a CLIL teacher wants to distinguish between both language and subject performance,
the scale may make that difficult: as we know, some learners tend to be good at language
and not at subjects and vice versa and the bandscale may make it hard for the teacher to
record that. Fortunately, a lot of CLIL programmes do not set out to make these
distinctions and simply assess the key subject-related knowledge and skills involved. For
these teachers, a scale will be useful.
Institutions involved in the AECLIL project have assessed a range of subjects and a
range of subject-related tasks within those subjects, using bandscales. The work of the
project should help us to understand more about how, using these specific instruments,
subject teachers working in a FL can measure the performance of their learners in the
subject as it is demonstrated through that language.
We bore these guidelines in mind while planning and carrying out the project so that
the outcomes achieved by the AECLIL partnership can now be easily shared and
employed in different teaching and learning environments.
In the following pages you will find both an introduction to the basic principles of
the process of evaluation and assessment in CLIL and a presentation of modules
planned, administered, tested and assessed according to a common standard with
reference to different school levels, plus a wide range of evaluation tools. The CD
contains all modules developed by the AECLIL partners.
The consortium has involved a great number of teachers and learners in Bulgaria,
France, Germany, Italy, Latvia, Romania, Spain, Sweden and Turkey. It has also allowed
the Institutions in charge of processing the data collected to produce a wide set of
evaluation grids, rubrics, evaluation and assessment tools, which have been validated
and are thus available to all stakeholders also on line at www.aeclil.net.
Lucia Alberti, AECLIL Project coordinator
* Official Journal of the European Union, Council conclusions of 12 May 2009 on a strategic framework for
European cooperation in education and training (ET 2020), 28.5.2009, C 119/4.
1
griglie e altri strumenti di valutazione che sono stati convalidati e resi accessibili a tutti
anche attraverso il sito www.aeclil.net.
Lucia Alberti, coordinatrice del progetto AECLIL
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AECLIL
DIE ZIELE DES PROJEKTS
Diese Verffentlichung und die angefgte CD sind das Ergebnis eines dreijhrigen
AECLIL Projekts (Assessment and Evaluation in Content and Language Integrated Learning),
das von der Europischen Kommission (EACEA) gefrdert wurde mit dem Ziel, CLILDidaktik durch den Austausch von best-practice-Beispielen zwischen verschiedenen
europischen Forschungszentren und Institutionen zu verbreiten. Die Untersuchung,
die von AECIL durchgefhrt wurde, zielt darauf ab, Mittel und Verfahren zu finden,
mit denen die Effizienz des Lernens eines Sachfaches in einer Fremdsprache geprft
und evaluiert werden kann, und eine Didaktik zu frdern, die die Sprachkompetenzen
selbst und gleichzeitig fcherbergreifende sowie kognitive Kompetenzen entwickelt.
Die Besonderheit des Projekts basiert auf der Erstellung einer Reihe von
gemeinsamen Lehrwerkzeugen, die es ermglichen, gleichermaen den Prozess und die
Ergebnisse von CLIL-Modulen zu berprfen und zu evaluieren. Das Projekt wurde in
neun verschiedenen Lndern durchgefhrt, wobei jedes Land einen anderen kulturellen
Hintergrund sowie ein eigenes Schulsystem hat. Darber hinaus ist CLIL auf
verschiedenen Niveaus des Erziehungssystems, von der Grundschule bis zur Universitt
und in Lehrerfortbildungskursen ausprobiert und berprft worden bei gleichzeitiger
Bercksichtigung des lebenslangen nicht formellen Lernens.
In den Conclusions of the Council and Representatives of Government of European Member States
(May 2009) ber das Frdern von Partnerschaften zwischen Bildungs- und Fortbildungsinstitutionen
sowie Sozialpartnern, bes. Arbeitgebern, im Rahmen von lebenslangem Lernen wird festgestellt:
Europische Kooperation im Bereich Bildung und Fortbildung sollte in eine
lebenslange Perspektive integriert werden, indem man effizient von der
offenen Koordinationsmethode Gebrauch macht und Synergieeffekte
zwischen den einzelnen Bildungs- und Fortbildungsabteilungen entwickelt.
Bei vollstndigem Respekt fr die Verantwortung eines jeden
Mitgliedsstaates fr sein Bildungssystem und die Freiwilligkeit europischer
Zusammenarbeit in Bildung und Fortbildung sollte die offene
Koordinationsmethode abzielen auf:
[]
10
Wir beachteten diese Richtlinien bei der Planung und Realisierung des AECLILProjekts, so dass die durch die Partnerschaft erzielten Ergebnisse nun problemlos
verbreitet und in verschiedenen Lehr- und Lernumgebungen angewendet werden
knnen.
Auf den folgenden Seiten findet man sowohl eine Einfhrung zu den
Grundprinzipien des Evaluationsprozesses und des sogenannten Assessments in CLIL als
auch eine Vorstellung von Modulen, die geplant, organisiert, getestet und berprft
worden sind entsprechend einem gemeinsamen Standard mit entsprechenden
Evaluationsinstrumenten und mit Rcksicht auf die verschiedenen Schulstufen. Die CD
enthlt alle Module, die von den AECLIL-Partnern entwickelt worden sind.
Das Projektkonsortium hat eine groe Anzahl von Lehrkrften und Lernern in
Bulgarien, Deutschland, Frankreich, Italien, Lettland, Rumnien, Spanien, Schweden
und der Trkei mit eingeschlossen. Dies erlaubte den Institutionen, die den Auftrag
hatten, die Daten zu systematisieren, ein breites Spektrum von Evaluationsschemata,
Matrices, Evaluations- und Testinstrumenten zu erstellen, die einer Beurteilung
unterzogen wurden und allen Anwendern zur Verfgung stehen (dies auch online unter
www.aeclil.net.
Lucia Alberti, Koordinatorin des AECLIL-Projekts
LOS OBJETIVOS DEL PROYECTO AECLIL
Tanto esta publicacin como el CD adjunto son el resultado de los tres aos de
trabajo en el Proyecto AECLIL (Assessment and Evaluation in Content and Language
Integrated Learning), financiado por la Comisin Europea (EACEA) con el objetivo de
difundir la metodologa CLIL mediante el intercambio de las mejores prcticas entre
diferentes centros de investigacin e instituciones de Europa. La investigacin de
AECLIL se centra en los mtodos de evaluacin de la efectividad del aprendizaje de una
asignatura no lingstica en una lengua extranjera, una metodologa que mejora la lengua
misma y, al mismo tiempo, desarrolla las destrezas intercurriculares y de pensamiento.
La originalidad de este proyecto se basa en la produccin de una serie de
herramientas didcticas compartidas, diseadas para evaluar tanto el proceso como los
resultados de la metodologa CLIL. El proyecto se ha llevado a cabo en nueve pases
diferentes, cada uno con antecedentes culturales y sistemas educativos distintos.
Adems, la metodologa CLIL ha sido experimentada y comprobada en varios niveles de
dichos sistemas educativos, desde la educacin primaria a los cursos de formacin de
profesorado, con un apartado especial para la educacin no formal permanente.
En el documento Conclusiones del Consejo y los Representantes de Gobierno de los Estados
miembros europeos (mayo, 2009) sobre la mejora de la colaboracin entre las instituciones educativas y
de formacin y los colaboradores sociales, en particular los empleadores, dentro del contexto del
aprendizaje permanente, se afirma:
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de formation des enseignants ; on peut mentionner quil concerne aussi la formation des
enseignants tout au long de leur vie.
Dans les Conclusions du Conseil et des Reprsentants de Gouvernement dtats membres
europens (mai 2009) en instaurant un partenariat entre lenseignement et la formation dinstitutions et
des partenaires sociaux, en particulier les employeurs, dans le contexte de formation continue, il est dit:
La coopration europenne dans lenseignement et la formation devrait tre
mise en uvre dans une perspective de formation long terme, en
permettant une collaboration et une coordination efficaces entre les
diffrents secteurs. En respectant entirement la responsabilit des tats
membres, de leurs systmes ducatifs et la nature volontaire de la
coopration europenne dans lenseignement et la formation des matres, la
collaboration devrait savancer : []
- des outils de rfrence communs et des approches communes
- un apprentissage entre pairs et des changes de bonnes pratiques y compris
la dissmination de rsultats*.
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15
AECLILs forskning r inriktad p att bedma och utvrdera effektiviteten av att lra ett
icke-sprkligt mne p ett frmmande sprk, en metod som frbttrar sjlva sprket och,
samtidigt, frstrker cross-kursplanerna och tnkandets skicklighet.
Originaliteten i projektet r baserat p produktion av delade undervisningsverktyg fr
att bedma och utvrdera bde processen och resultaten av CLIL. Projektet har
genomfrts i nio olika lnder, var och en av dem med olika kulturell bakgrund och
skolsystem. Dessutom har CLIL experimenterats och kontrolleras p olika niver av
utbildningssystemen, frn grundskolan till universitetet och kurser fr lrare, med en
extra titt p livslngt informellt lrande.
I Slutsatser av rdet och fretrdare fr regeringen i Europeiska medlemsstater (maj 2009) om
frbttrat partnerskap mellan utbildningsinstitut och arbetsmarknadens parter, srskilt arbetsgivare,
inom ramen fr livslngt lrande, konstateras att:
Europeiskt samarbete p utbildningsomrdet br genomfras i ett livslngt
lrandeperspektiv fr att effektivt anvnda sig av den ppna
samordningsmetoden
och
utveckla
synergier
mellan
olika
utbildningssektorer. Samtidigt som fullt ut respektera medlemsstaternas
ansvar fr sina utbildningssystem och europeiskt samarbete p
utbildningsomrdet frivilliga karaktr, den ppna samordningsmetoden br
dra nytta av:
[]
- gemensamma referensverktyg och metoder,
msesidigt lrande och utbyte av god praxis, inklusive spridning av
resultat*.
Vi bar dessa riktlinjer i tanke medan vi planerar och genomfr projektet s att
resultaten som uppns genom AECLIL partnerskap kan nu enkelt delas och anvndas i
olika undervisning och lrande miljer.
P fljande sidor hittar du bde en introduktion till de grundlggande principerna fr
processen fr utvrdering och bedmning i CLIL och en presentation av moduler som
planeras, administreras, testas och utvrderas enligt en gemensam standard med
hnvisning till olika skolniver, plus ett stort antal utvrderingsverktyg. Skivan innehller
alla moduler som utvecklats av AECLIL partner.
Konsortiet inneburit ett stort antal lrare och elever i Bulgarien, Frankrike, Tyskland,
Italien, Lettland, Rumnien, Spanien, Sverige och Turkiet. Det har ocks tilltit
institutioner som ansvarar fr bearbetning av data att samlas fr att utarbeta en bred
uppsttning av utvrdering rubrics, utvrdering och bedmningsverktyg, som har
validerats och r drmed tillgngliga fr alla berrda parter ven online p
www.aeclil.net.
Lucia Alberti, AECLIL projektkoordinator
PROJENIN AMALARI
Bu yayn (ve ilgili CD), Avrupadaki farkl enstit ve aratrma merkezleri arasnda,
edinilen tecrbeyi paylaarak CLIL (Content and Language Integrated Learning erik ve
Dilin Birlikte renimi) metodolojisi uygulamalarnn yaygnlamas amacn tayan ve
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INTRODUCTION
CLIL can now be considered a real teaching method. Books and publications
concerning CLIL practices, processes and achievements are numerous and of excellent
quality. Unfortunately we cannot say the same about evaluation in CLIL. In fact papers
on this fundamental topic are still rare, and precisely for this reason we have decided to
start the AECLIL Project, which involves nine European countries (Italy, Spain, France,
Germany, Sweden, Latvia, Romania, Bulgaria and Turkey).
The main tasks of the project are the following:
- stimulate teachers and students towards change;
- help students acquire a good knowledge of the school subjects;
- explore new learning strategies that can be applied in other contexts;
- encourage the integration of learning and new technologies;
- develop cultural competences that could favour a European-wide context;
- contribute to the achievement of the competences stated in the Lisbon guidelines;
- develop tools for assessment referred to different kinds of tasks (analytic and holistic
rubrics);
- develop plurilingualism and multilingualism;
- acquire creative and intercultural skills.
These are the steps implemented:
- compare and develop ways of implementing and sharing CLIL projects and
experiences in the schools of the participant countries;
- plan CLIL pathways (by using online resources) in some disciplines to be chosen
from the field of science and technology and from the arts and humanities, in
collaboration with the different partners involved;
- design and implement monitoring and evaluation tools;
- produce learning units through the methods of cooperative learning, using the ICT
tools available;
- test the material produced in class, using monitoring devices;
- compare and disseminate the results through the social web;
- provide assessment and evaluation feedback.
The teaching practices and related research conducted so far have been based mainly
on four CLIL principles: content, communication, cognition and culture. But these
experiences and studies were based on a limited number of experiments (two or three
classes, one or maximum two disciplines), and normally occurred in favourable
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We should emphasize that the project staff effectively developed the tools listed
above. Most of them where actually used and employed by the teachers involved in the
project, though some were not. The following chapters will report only on those which
were tested. The theme of the project warrants a major impact through the
development, testing, monitoring, re-definition and dissemination of modules and
materials. The outcomes of the AECLIL Project will give educators of any kind the
possibility to count on a wealth of materials ready to use, tested and validated.
METHODOLOGIES
The project employs different methodologies depending on the scope and results
that we want to achieve.
Referring to the timeline of the project, the first methodology employed was the
implementation of a thorough investigation of the CLIL experiences completed in the
nine partner countries. The investigation was extensive and very detailed. The survey
results were tabulated and collected in an Excel file and then commented on and
published on the official website of the project (www.aeclil.eu). The survey produced a
comprehensive and very interesting overview of the different ways in which CLIL is
dealt with in the partners countries. In particular, the following fields have been
investigated: subjects, languages used and their level, curricular requirements, motivation
and participation of students, parental involvement, teacher training, materials used, the
use of ITC, assessment and evaluation.
The importance and relevance of this survey is evident. The detailed analysis of the
results allowed us to have a framework and a mapping of CLIL experiences in the
different countries, but above all gave us useful information for the creation of the
modules that were produced in the second phase of this project.
Each institution produced a number of modules (from primary to secondary and
high schools and adult education) which were administered to students and assessed
employing the grids provided and developed by the staff. Very often these tools were
changed and adapted to local situations. Nonetheless, the results of the assessments are
reported in the evaluation chapter.
The tools provided (see the following chapters) have been organized in analytic
rubrics and holistic rubrics according to what they were designed to assess. Moreover,
relevant remarks have been made about the assessment of language proficiency and
content acquisition, self- and peer assessment, and the role of teachers.
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EVALUATION STRATEGY
The evaluation strategies are clearly stated. In particular: in order to ensure the
necessary high standards of quality of the deliverables, the following three aspects have
been observed:
1. Content: the content of all deliverables was checked with respect to whether or not
they contain what they should contain. In other words, it was checked whether or
not each deliverable provided the right content.
2. Language: the language of all deliverables was checked in order to ensure readability,
intelligibility, clarity, and correct language use. It is important that all messages are
clear, not only for the benefit of the Consortium, but also for the benefit of the
public at large who will make use of the materials developed within the AECLIL
Project.
3. Format: the format of all deliverables was checked, in order to ensure that they meet
the formal requirements of the EU Commission.
Internal evaluation is intended to focus mainly on processes throughout the project
implementation, and for this reason it is continuous during the (whole project) cycle,
including all the phases of work. It is fundamentally formative in that it aims to finetune and adapt the working context.
The following internal evaluation procedure is incorporated within the project:
- data collection through methods and techniques designed specifically for each step of
the project;
- analysis of the data collected;
- a report drawn up for the evaluation of each phase;
- sharing and discussing the report among the AECLIL partners;
- analysis and comment on the data collected through questionnaires administered to
students and teachers.
The introduction of an external evaluator reinforced the work of Pavia University
and lend to express an opinion and evaluation on:
- activities carried out;
- the final products and outcomes;
- the path followed;
- the sustainability of the project.
DISSEMINATION STRATEGY
The Consortium has established a number of strategies for the exploitation and
dissemination of the project results. The plan involves the following activities:
- publication of articles concerning the project and its achievements in local
newspapers in the different countries;
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knowledge, not simply by adding information, but also by eliciting and enhancing their
learning capacities and problem-solving skills.
PARTNERS
The partnership, formed to implement the AECLIL Project, boasts a wide range of
skills and sensibilities that make possible the achievement of truly cross (transversal)
targets in the world of education and training.
Here you can find the most relevant information each partner has provided about
their own institution:
Rete CLIL della provincia di Pavia (IT) is the applicant
organization of the AECLIL Project and it is a network of 31 primary
and secondary schools in the Province of Pavia, Northern Italy.
The Rete CLIL della provincia di Pavia was founded in 2008 to achieve the
following objectives: promote cooperation in research, teacher training, dissemination
of materials, methodologies and tools that facilitate the teaching / learning languages
taught through the content; develop community awareness of the linguistic diversity that
enrich the European Union; enhance the experience of CLIL schools in the province of
Pavia; design and implement CLIL courses; provide training on CLIL methodology,
organize seminars, educational events on CLIL; access to European projects (especially
Comenius and Leonardo) to send content and language teachers abroad to attend
workshops for specialization on CLIL; create pathways of action/research, create a
database accessible online on educational materials relevant to CLIL.
All these objectives are fulfilled in the AECLIL Project which the Pavia CLIL
Network really wanted because little or nothing already exists at the level of assessment
and the tools produced in the project will be useful to all the colleagues in the Network
who are actually carrying out CLIL experiences in their schools.
Lyce professionnel dconomie G.S. Rakovsky (Yambol, BG). The
Vocational High School of Economics G.S. Rakovsky is the only school
in the region to provide economic disciplines and to prepare
professionals in the field of finance, accounting, banking, management,
trade. In 2004 the school was selected for a bilingual project in the
specialty Trade. In recent years the school has a policy dynamics of
international relations through European projects within the framework
of the Leonardo da Vinci, Comenius and eTwinning. We conducted two three-week
courses (2005 and 2008) in banks in Marseille and received the Certificate of Quality.
After four projects eTwinning two of which have obtained the European Quality Label
we were invited for two consecutive years to attend the World Forum in Lille.
We are taking part in creating assessment grids and tools for evaluating. After
working on bilingual project we have some experience in teaching nonlinguistic subjects
banks and business economics in French and English. So we could enrich and share
our knowledge and competences. In this way we relate the theory to the students future
professional realization. We are strongly engaged in the project following the pathways
23
assigned. The value is that this method motivates and makes students more active and
engaged during the lesson.
Gymnasium an der Gartenstrae (Mnchengladbach, D) is a
general secondary school that has been active in the field of CLIL
for more than ten years. There is a bilingual branch that covers
geography and citizenship/economics taught in English. Bilingual
classes start in year 7 when students are 12 years old. Teachers
working in the bilingual branch have university degrees and teaching qualifications in
English and one of the CLIL subjects. Apart from the bilingual branch there is an
optional Business English course in years 8 and 9 and 11. For those students we have
organized annual meetings in the frame of a regional school network, where they
present business plans for start-up companies. Our principal interest is the enlargement
of our bilingual courses with the help of CLIL modules in other subjects beside those
we teach in our bilingual branch (geography, economics and politics).
The role in the AECLIL Project: Gymnasium an der Gartenstrae is envolved in the
management, dissemination of the project, the development of the pathways and the
evaluation of the project results. We tried out one module developed by the Rete CLIL
della Provincia di Pavia (Redox reactions) and another one in the field of artistic education
(Aboriginal art). The results of the AECLIL Project offer us a large pool of modules and
didactic material we will use in our institution and our classes. In the future we will try
out more modules. The evaluation tools will help us to adapt them more precisely to the
needs of our staffs and our students.
Universidad Antonio de Nebrija (Madrid, E) is a university
with international vocation. Concerned with the importance of
plurilingualism and multiculturalism in tertiary education, exchange
programs among students and teachers have been a reality for
years. CLIL is common practice in the Faculties of Social Sciences,
Communication and Languages, since they all offer bilingual degrees. The Department
of Applied Languages (DLA) teaches through CLIL and promotes it in the extracurricular activities (Aula Plurilingue del Medio Ambiente, EUTIP). Since 2009 the
department also contributes to introduce and spread CLIL in the Spanish educational
system: it collaborates with Fundacin San Patricio in teacher training sessions
addressed to teachers of bilingual schools. At the end of the academic year, the
department organizes a bilingual forum (Foro Bilinge Nebrija) created to discuss
current issues regarding bilingualism at schools.
In the course 2011/2012 the DLA has introduced a Masters degree in bilingual
education for primary and secondary teachers, and in the following year two new
bilingual degrees in education for infants and primary students are also offered. The
module Learning CLIL through CLIL is Nebrijas contribution to the AECLIL module
repository. Carried out in English (B1/B2) and divided in three units that provide
approximately 10 teaching hours, its tasks have been planned to achieve not only a total
understanding of the dynamics of the task-based approach within the classroom, but
24
also knowledge of specific contents and terminology through practical examples and
language recognition activities.
Institut Universitaire de Formation des Matres (Montpellier, F). The Teacher
Training Institute (IUFM), part of the University of Montpellier 2 Science and
Technology, is responsible for initial teacher training at primary and secondary level.
The IUFM offers training courses in all the subjects taught in the French educational
system as well as courses of pedagogy.
Concerning CLIL, the IUFM considers the CLIL approach as a priority. The IUFM
organizes initial and in-service teacher training for teachers in CLIL. These teachers will
later teach their subject in a foreign language in European Sections (sections
europennes). The Language Department of the IUFM, the teacher trainers in charge of
the CLIL training courses and two secondary schools with European Sections are
associated with the project.
The IUFMs contribution to the AECLIL Project consisted in the production of
learning units through the methods of collaborative learning in cooperation with the
other partners and in the organisation of short teacher training sessions.
lend Lingua e Nuova Didattica (Roma, IT) is an association
of language teachers founded in 1971. It has carried out numerous
studies and training activities in the field of language education and,
in doing so, has contributed to the development of the Italian education system. Its
proactive approach is best illustrated by its journal lend, by the Libri della Collana lend,
through its national conferences and several seminars. lend operates throughout Italy by
means of a network of local groups, each with its own structure. Lend has also played a
part in making accessible important EU documents on school and language policy and
has participated in European projects as either partner or coordinator. Lend is one of
the founders and an active member of REAL, the European Network of Language Teachers
Associations, and of the OEP, Observatoire Europen pour le Plurilinguisme. Lend is strongly
involved in language teacher training so it is in a good position to promote the
multilingual approach within its audience (teachers, students, trainers).
The participation in the AECLIL Project is rooted in the mission of lend. CLIL helps
to give greater force to the spread of multilingualism. On the other hand it is a
methodology that weaves two disciplines and requires new ways for the assessment and
evaluation of learning. Through the AECLIL Project, lend aims to support innovative
proposals in the field of evaluation.
Centro Linguistico Universit degli Studi di Pavia (IT). The
Language Centre at Pavia University promotes the diffusion of
foreign language learning and the knowledge of CLIL teaching
methodology. In particular, since 2006 it has provided primary school
teachers with CLIL training courses in collaboration with the local education
department. Moreover, the Centre provides university students with audiovisual
materials for self-study and coordinates language courses for all faculties at Pavia
University. Finally, drawing on its well-established tradition of L2 testing, the Centre
25
26
27
28
With CLIL Content and Language Integrated Learning we name the teaching of
any non-language-subject through the medium of a language which is not the mother
tongue. The English acronym is used in several countries, such as in Romania, Latvia,
Sweden, Turkey, but some countries have their own name and acronym. In France, for
example, they call it EMILE Enseignement dune Matire Intgr une Langue Etrangre.
Bulgaria uses the French acronym. In Spain the official name is AICLE, Aprendizaje
Integrado de Contenidos y Lenguas Extranjeras, but CLIL is more widely used. In Germany
they use the term Bilingualer Sachfachunterricht, intended to mean roughly the same as
CLIL, which is also in use. But there is a difference, Bilingualer Sachfachunterricht includes
in the learning process of the subject language also the mother tongue. While CLIL
courses tend in general to concentrate on the foreign language and approach immersion
courses, the bilingual feature characterizes German courses. Bilingualer Sachfachunterricht
do not only ensure that learners can understand and manage discourses on the subject
also in their mother tongue, but also that they become aware of cultural features and
differences.
CLIL NOT ONLY CONTENT AND LANGUAGE
In a CLIL approach students use a foreign language to learn new content. The focus
is on the meaning. CLILs aim is to provide learning outcomes in the chosen subject at
the same level as the standard mother tongue curriculum; and to provide learning
outcomes in the L2 which exceed the standard curriculum (Masih1999:8).
In CLIL lessons both the process of understanding the content and the language acts
the learner will perform in managing the content have to be considered. The classroom
activities should be geared both towards the acquisition of disciplinary competence and
towards the acquisition of communicative competence, in terms of both reception and
production. Students do not converse on topics they already know just to acquire a
language or to master it better. They have the advantage of addressing concrete issues of
the real world in a language that is not their native language. And they do not just listen
to the teachers explanations and study from books, but draw on sources of various
kinds, surfing the Internet, interacting with peers. In this manner, they get to know facts
often belonging to worlds different from theirs, develop new concepts, identify the
relationships between the concepts and, considering data, come to find out the
principles that support them.
CLIL classes focus knowledge of an unknown content using thinking skills to
understand, analyze, synthesize, evaluate and communicate about. Language enables to
construct meaning and to express thinking. We have evidence in the fact that thinking
skills are expressed through verbs used also to express language functions (see Threshold
29
level 1975 and Assessment tools and practices in CLIL in this book). Successful content
learning is dependent on language, and that has to be considered particularly in CLIL
where the language is not completely mastered.
CLIL can be described by four factors Coyle, Hood & Marsh (2010) call the 4Cs:
content, cognition, communication and culture. The real context these four elements are
embedded in may open windows on cultures the learners dont belong to.
LANGUAGE AND SUBJECTS
Disciplines can be grouped into three broad areas where they are analyzed according
to the characteristics of language (i.e., for the expressive instruments used and the
communicative activities recurring) rather than the content covered:
- humanistic and social disciplines;
- scientific and technical disciplines;
- artistic and practical disciplines (Wolff, Quartapelle, 2011).
The so-called humanities, such as philosophy and history, use a language closer to
everyday life, relatively polysemic, which makes extensive use of connotation and may
produce cultural interferences which have to be considered. For example, when French
and Italian people name the coming of Northern peoples (Gothics, Vandals, etc.) to
their homeland during the end of the Western Roman empire and the Middle Ages
invasione dei barbari/invasions des barbares, and Germans name the same event
Vlkerwanderung (wandering of peoples), this is not only terminology, but different
historical understanding. In the humanities the ability to integrate verbal communication
with other communication tools is reduced. The content is placed, in the lesson, in an
interacting way making little use of visual materials. Even if sometimes the teachings
concerning social situations and events are illustrated with pictures and videos, the
lesson always relays on verbal exchange.
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31
32
In foreign language classes, where the language can be practised in a fictional context,
students develop language skills like BICS that, over the years, grow closer to the skills
of a native speaker. This learning is represented by the inverted pyramid. In CLIL,
represented by the pyramid resting on its base, the subject content from the beginning
requires a wide linguistic basis, characterized by a certain syntactic complexity and a
specific vocabulary. In order to act and interact on specific topics, the student must be
sufficiently equipped from a linguistic point of view. On the other hand he does not
require a fluency in addition to that which refers to the subject itself: the language of the
subjects and the symbolic ones are sufficient for the development of subject content.
However, it is not only a matter of acquisition of new forms, new vocabulary and new
language structures. The specific discourse forms and terminology belonging to the
different subjects and to the different aims of the lesson have a relation with language
activity and thinking skills. In the module The Earth, Our House, for instance, learners are
lead to learn and memorize specific vocabulary with the aim to raise awareness and to
cooperate with peers. They try out ideas, confront their understanding, negotiate new
understandings, explore new ideas, draw conclusion. In the module Nutrition, where the
topic is studied in form 10, 11 and 12, learners go through three stages, focusing on
different aspects and referring to previous knowledge, processing more complex
concepts.
What happens in a CLIL lesson can be described as exemplified in the following
table adapted from Jrvinen (2009). There you can also see that language functions are
expressing thinking skills.
TOPIC
The topic
Activities or
components
includes these
activities
Language: functions
describing
comparing...
Language structures
which will be
modelled using this
language.
Vocabulary
cellophane
red, blue,
green, black, yellow, orange
scissors
ruler
pot
paper
basket
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WHY CLIL
It is stated in the Action Plan for language learning that the European Commission
had launched for the three years 2004-2006: Content and Language Integrated
Learning (CLIL), in which pupils learn a subject through the medium of a foreign
language, has a major contribution to make to the Unions language learning goals. It
can provide effective opportunities for pupils to use their new language skills now,
rather than learn them now for use later. It opens doors on languages for a broader
range of learners, nurturing self-confidence in young learners and those who have not
responded well to formal language instruction in general education. It provides exposure
to the language without requiring extra time in the curriculum, which can be of
particular interest in vocational settings. (European Commission, 2003).
Also proposing to address practical issues of real life with attention to one or the
other subject, CLIL helps to build key competences for lifelong learning, those of which
each citizen needs to activate attitudes (interpersonal skills), knowledge (know), skills
(the ability to do) that allow to effectively perform an activity or a complex task in
response to individual or social needs. These competences emphasize critical thinking,
creativity, initiative, problem solving, risk assessment, decision taking, and constructive
management of feelings. They provide the basis for taking an active part in society and
for learning throughout life (ability to learn) (Recommendation of the European
Parliament and of the Council, 2006).
CLIL also allows you to practice the language at school for a greater number of
hours than those which may be made available for teaching foreign languages.
CLIL IN THE PARTNERS COUNTRIES
Commonly, CLIL teaching occurs when learners, who have the same mother tongue,
are taught one or more subjects in a language that is foreign to them. The situation is
however changing. In todays classrooms, there are more and more students who have
mother tongues other than that used for their education. The common lessons for these
students end up being CLIL lessons, even if not declared as such.
Then there is the situation of multilingual countries, where, with some frequency,
CLIL is made in the language of the other language group. This is what happens for
Swedish in Finland, the Flemish in French Belgium or for linguistic minority groups,
such as Ukrainian, German and Hungarian in Romania and the Russian in Latvia. This
does not happen in Italy, in South Tyrol, where Italian and German groups have
separate schools that fail to introduce CLIL teaching. Only in secondary schools of
Ladin valleys, lessons of different subjects are carried out partly in German and partly in
Italian, but only because there are no text books in Ladin.
In some countries they rely on CLIL method to counteract the disappearance of
minority languages. So to avoid the extinction of the Sorbian language, spoken by about
60.000 people living between Brandenburg and Saxony, after a preschool marked by
immersion, Sorbian is proposed with the CLIL method for teaching some school
subjects. Similarly in Switzerland, Romansh, which is spoken by 0,5% of the population,
is revitalized with an early CLIL teaching (Le Pape Racine, 2001).
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Nowadays CLIL courses are also foreseen for children of Dutch families living in
Germany next to the Dutch border because their parents work in the Netherlands. Such
learners aim (or that of their parents) in a CLIL course is that they can participate in
both linguistic and cultural social environments.
DIDACTICS
It is natural to wonder what teaching methodology is more effective for CLIL,
whether the one of the foreign language lessons or the one of specific subjects, given
that in CLIL we pursue the learning of both content and foreign language.
In CLIL lessons the attention paid to language is undoubtedly greater than it is when
the teaching of the subject takes place in the mother tongue, where attention is still
required for the acquisition of specific language. You may however consider that in a
school with an increasing number of non-native speakers of the language of instruction
it becomes increasingly difficult to distinguish between learning in mother tongue and
learning a language that is not that of the learner. In these new contexts, as well as the
development of disciplinary competence, the classroom activities must be geared to the
acquisition of communicative competence, and a communicative competence that will
not remain generic, but specific, which induces to use the language and discursive
registers characteristic of that particular discipline.
These demands require an integrated approach that cannot be based on methods that
use transactional practices in which the student plays a role substantially responsive.
Priority should be given to empower to use teaching practices that involve the learner in
research and independent study and that, in class, encourage interaction among peers
rather than between students and the teacher. Communication is fundamental. When
students work in groups, they exchange information, deal with questions and discuss
among themselves. They describe, explain, evaluate, argue, draw conclusions, which
they then communicate through written or oral reports (Wolff, Quartapelle 2011).
Socialized learning strengthens understanding and supports knowledge construction.
A good pedagogical and didactical choice is to tackle real problems with tasks that
involve learners in cooperative activities, which lead them to develop content for
solutions to be presented to the entire class. These are the features of project-based
teaching/learning, a methodology that more than others develops skills, because it
involves the use of authentic materials that provide a wide input necessary to focus on a
problem. A project does not remain closed within the walls of the classroom, it has
strong ties with the outside world, both because the issues that it faces are real, and
because the solutions developed may affect the real world, as it is shown in the modules
Le crdit, where pupils have to create a presentation of the virtual bank, or in Nachhaltige
Entwiklung und erneuerbare Energien, where the learners simulate a public discussion. The
work is developed in authentic classroom interaction and results in an authentic
communication outside.
The project work is particularly suitable for CLIL. The modules Learning CLIL
through CLIL and CLIL through CLIL aiming to develop skills for teaching CLIL in
teachers and teachers trainers are representative of it.
35
All the teaching procedures are determined by the subject. Language needs are taken
into account secondarily, when one needs to explain the terms or capture the typical
structures of the language of the subject.
Even in CLIL a quality teaching activity is the result of the interaction of four
parameters considered of equal value: intention, topic, methodology, choice of media.
You cannot take decisions on any one of these parameters disregarding its relationship
with the other three. The choices of the educational materials, for example, depend on
the objectives of learning, but are also determined by both the content you want to
share and by the working method. On the other hand, of course, the materials chosen in
turn have an impact on the method, content and also on the learning objectives,
according to the model developed by the Berlin Pedagogic School (Heimann, Otto &
Schulz 1965). This applies to any teaching, to CLIL as well. In the modules developed in
the AECLIL Project several types of media are used: texts, videos, ppt, registered
lesson, music, graphics, pictures, internet sites, listening documents, job advertisements,
as you can see in the module Redox Reactions and in the other modules presented in this
book and on the CD.
AND WHAT ABOUT ASSESSMENT AND EVALUATION?
The CLIL learner is asked to analyze social, historical, natural phenomena, to carry
out tasks, address problems, organize speeches by interacting with others. The
communicative activity is not aimed at enhancing itself, but at the understanding and
development of concepts and phenomena and the exchange of information. If the
content and methodology of the subjects are engaging, they enhance language learning,
but also learning of the subject.
We have realized that the students who had benefited from CLIL-style learning
managed to master the contents of the discipline better than the students who
experienced traditional teaching in their mother tongue. They were able to define more
precisely what they had learned and give detailed information (Lamsfu-Schenk, 2008,
Zydati, 2007). It seems that this is explained mainly by the fact that learning the
content in a foreign language requires greater elaboration activities. In mother tongue
students can indeed define a concept or discuss a topic using language loosely.
Otherwise if they have a limited command of the foreign language, they are forced to
resort to detailed descriptions, perhaps because the concept has not got, in the foreign
language, the corresponding words used daily, or perhaps because they understand the
complexity of the topic and store the most appropriate specific word. In the native
language the student may get away with a superficial reworking of the content, while the
teaching in a language that is learnt together with the subject assures him a deeper
reworking and consequently a deeper understanding.
These are statements that must be supported by empirical data. We need tools to
assess the quality of education and levels of CLIL linguistic and disciplinary competence
achieved by students. How are disciplinary competences growing, within the context of
emergent language skills? How can we overcome the constraints of communicating on
new content with limited language while trying to preserve the complexity of the
content? How can we support language learning and acquisition while dealing with
complex content? There are many questions raised by the AECLIL Project. CLIL
36
modules have been developed and tried out in class. Input materials, tasks, assessment
criteria and tools have been evaluated. Students attainment and performances have
been assessed; the assessment process has been evaluated. The following chapters, the
modules and all evaluation and assessment tools presented in this book and on the CD
will give an overview of the work done and how far we went in our evaluation and
assessment in CLIL.
REFERENCES
Council of Europe, 1975: Threshold level, Strasbourg.
Coyle D., Hood Ph., Marsh D., 2010: CLIL, Content and Language Integrated Learning,
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Cummins J., 2000: Language, Power and Pedagogy, Multilingual Matters, Clevedon.
European Commission, 2003: Promoting Language Learning and Linguistic Diversity: an Action
Plan 2004-2006, COM (2003) 449 F,
http://ec.europa.eu/education/doc/official/keydoc/actlang/act_lang_en.pdf.
Heimann P., Otto G., Schulz W., 1965: Unterricht Analyse und Planung. Schroedel,
Hannover.
Jrvinen H. (ed.), 2009: Language in Content Instruction, Handbook, University of Turku,
http://lici.utu.fi/materials/LICI_Handbook_EN.pdf.
Lamsfu-Schenk S., 2008: Fremdverstehen im bilingualen Geschichtsunterricht Eine Fallstudie,
Peter Lang, Frankfurt/Main,.
Le Pape Racine C., 2001: Frher Fremdsprachenerwerb, in Mittendrin 2.
Leisen J., 1992: Ich glaube, da zwei Meter sind... - Sprachprobleme im
deutschsprachigen Physikunterricht. In: Der Deutsche Lehrer im Ausland 2, p. 130134.
Masih J., 1999: Learning through a Foreign Language: Models, Methods and Outcomes, CILT
(Centre for Information on Language Teaching and Research), London.
Recommendation of the European Parliament and of the Council of 18 December 2006 on key
competences for lifelong learning, Official Journal L 394, 30/12/2006,p. 0010- 0018,
http://europa.eu/legislation_summaries/education_training_youth/lifelong_learn
ing/c11090_en.htm.
Wolff D., Quartapelle F., 2011: Linee guida per il CLIL in tedesco / CLIL in deutscher Sprache
in Italien: Milano, Goethe-Institut, MIUR Ufficio Scolastico Regionale per la
Lombardia, German: http://www2.goethe.de/ins/it/rom/bkd/leitfaden_clil.pdf;
Italian:
http://ww.progettolingue.net/?pageid=50;
http://goethe.de/ins/it/lp/lhr/the/clil/de7578029.htm.
Zydati W., 2007: Deutsch-Englische Zge in Berlin (DEZIBEL). Eine Evaluation des
bilingualen Sachfachunterrichts an Gymnasien. Kontext, Kompetenzen, Konsequenzen, Peter
Lang, Frankfurt/Main.
37
INTRODUCTION
One of the main objectives of the AECLIL Project certainly is to provide guidelines
and tools for CLIL assessment, so far an area where there is incomplete and not
systematic documentation. In particular, the existing materials refer primarily to
educational situations different from those in which content and language integrated
learning generally takes place in Europe.
The realization of this objective could not then disregard a thorough reflection on
what we mean by CLIL assessment and its specificity, with respect to the context in
which CLIL is practiced.
The cooperation of different countries with diverse backgrounds and experiences
have provided an ideal situation for comparison and testing. The procedure followed
was as follows:
- a survey on CLIL dissemination and practices in each country; CLIL is known as an
umbrella term covering different ways of teaching in different situations and also
involving different teaching procedures and thus their assessment procedures;
- drafting of thematic modules, based on agreed guidelines, which envisaged the
development of didactic pathways of about 20 hours;
- subsequent classification of the activities developed based on a framework of
reference;
- proposal of assessment tools, testing by partners, and new proposals.
This chapter will describe precisely the main stages of this process from an
assessment perspective, subsequently proposing specific tools which have been
developed and tested, highlighting progress but also the aspects to be explored, which
may be subject to further studies and analyses.
THE MAIN ISSUES FOR ASSESSMENT IN CLIL
Assessment is not something that comes after instruction, but is an
indispensable part of instruction. It is by thinking about assessment that we
really start to sharpen up our idea of what CLIL is about and the role of
language within it (Llinares et al., 2012: 280).
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39
of criteria, scores and descriptors that may quantify, evaluate and interpret the
outcomes. Reliable assessment is accurate, precise and consistent: the same or similar
outcome is rated the same (or almost the same) if the assessment is repeated and if
different raters judge it independently from one another.
Therefore, assessment is crucial because of its wash-back effect on learning; it
must cover both content and language and take into consideration all aspects of CLIL
communication in their specific context. A positive effect of assessment on CLIL
consists in making the learner aware of the wide range of capabilities that can be
developed through this approach, instead of focusing on a specific set of data.
Specific questions/issues
A particular issue is relevant and specific to CLIL: what to assess? Assess only the
content, language and content separately? The answer to this question cannot be
separated from a clear vision of what CLIL is and from the needs that are to be satisfied
in a specific social and educational context.
CLIL owes a lot (as has been highlighted in the previous chapter) to studies on
Canadian and American bilingual teaching both as regards its theoretical foundations
and its terminology. For example, the BICS/CALP distinction, expressed by the
previously quoted Cummins (2000; see Teaching and learning with CLIL in this book),
summarizes, in two simple abbreviations, the variety of language uses, highlighting the
limits of language learning simply designed to communicate in a context of everyday life
(BICS) and, conversely, the need to address, in a specific way, the academic language
(CALP) used to learn the subjects:
Simple communication skills may hide a childs relative inadequacy in the
language proficiency necessary to meet the cognitive and academic demands
in the classroom. The language used when playing with a ball in the school
playground is very different from calculating, using a protractor, the obtuse
angle of the parallelogram and then constructing a diagonal line between the
two obtuse angles and investigating if this creates congruent triangles (Baker
2001:169).
We must, however, note differences between the American and/or Canadian social
context and the European one regarding the situations of language learning. The
situation highlighted by Cummins and Baker is essentially the one of English as a
language of instruction, together with different languages of immigration used
effectively in situations of everyday life; thus, in a school context the lessons are usually
taught in English to a linguistically non-homogeneous audience (for which the vehicular
language can be either the mother or the second tongue) at different levels of
competence, where, for second language, we mean the one the student acquires and
uses in the immigration country.
This dual-focused learning is thus a possible solution to include students whose
mother tongue differs from that in which the lessons are taught in the mainstream
curricula:
40
In Europe the situation is different and more varied. The platform for European
education of the Council of Europe (2010) highlights the distinct status of languages in
the European education system: the language can be studied as a subject, as a foreign or
mother tongue or through a subject. CLIL fits into this context and takes the form of a
provision in which a subject, or a portion thereof, is taught in a language other than the
native language. Learning the language through the subject as a resource for
strengthening multilingualism and linguistic stimulus (Commission of the European
Communities, 2003) implies, as we know, a reflection on the ways in which meanings
are created through language and suggests deep similarities between learning in the
mother tongue and in the foreign one.
Despite the variety of ways in which CLIL learning takes place in Europe (Eurydice,
2006), there is an aspect common to almost all countries, which was evident even
among the partners in this project: the vehicular language (not necessarily English)
generally is foreign for all students in a class, whatever their language of origin is; CLIL
also does not replace the teaching of language as such the language as a subject but
is realized in parallel to such teaching.
CLIL teaching in Europe variously represented by the partners of different
nationalities in this project can count, in fact, on a number of common features as
regards the objectives and learning conditions. Consequently, evaluation also has
specific traits that do not identify exactly with what happens in other educational
settings, such as Canada or the United States, where the knowledge of the language of
instruction which may not be the same as the mother tongue is crucial for success
and integration in Society (Llinares et al. 2012) and where a formative assessment
necessarily tends to separate language from content:
Teachers may not be sure whether a student is simply unable to demonstrate
knowledge because of a language barrier or whether, indeed, the student
does not know the content material being assessed. Yet, a distinction needs
to be drawn, especially if a student is not succeeding in a course (Short,
1993: 3).
Thus, with respect to the question what to assess in CLIL, whether or not to assess
the two components together or separately, there are in Europe different positions in
this regard, even if a real assessment model has not been proposed so far. So-called
European CLIL states clearly that the focus should be on content, and the language is
intended as instrumental to the latters development (Coyle et al. 2010). Not that the
problem of language or that of the formal correctness does not exist, but these must be
resolved by the CLIL practice itself.
On the one hand, one of the basic principles of CLIL is comprehensible input, that is,
specific strategies of scaffolding must ensure understanding of the message or text; on the
other hand, linguistic correctness must be ensured in different ways than those
traditionally followed in language courses, such as ensuring spaces are provided for
correction, through what Do Coyle defines as a language clinic:
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42
Thinking skills
Knowledge structure
Lower-order TS
Concepts /
classification
Knowledge structure
defining
identifying
classifying
.
Language
CALP functions
description
- identifying elements in
their context
- classifying objects &
ideas according to their
characteristics
- identifying & describing
information
- .
Higher-order TS
CALP functions
Language structures
Vocabulary
specific
vocabulary
+
grammar
Language structures
Vocabulary
Principles /
relationships
explaining
hypothesizing
applying
comparing
solving problems
.
sequences
- explaining organizing
principles & reasoning
processes
- generating hypothesis on
causes & effects
- predicting implications,
hypothesising
- applying a model
- making a timeline, cycle
or narrative sequence
- describing problemsolving procedures
applied to real life
problems
- .
syntax
+
textual types
Evaluation /
creation
evaluating
expressing
opinions
making choices
creating
.
choices
- summarising information,
incorporating new
information with prior
knowledge
- identifying criteria,
explaining priorities
- indicating reasons for
judgments
- confirming truth
- .
creative use of
structures and
vocabulary
43
The first level is factual: items are identified and classified in their concrete
context. This level is or may be linked to concrete experience (Cummins, 2000:
65). From a linguistic point of view it corresponds to the description and
organization of information (collecting, for example, knowledge by categories:
Who?, What?, Where?, How? When? Which concepts?).
The second level concerns the relationship between concepts (or items). The
questions are: What principles are there? How are they related to each
other? (cause-effect, consequences, methods and techniques, rules). What
happens? What are the processes, procedures or routines? The second level is
therefore of principles, which are expressed linguistically through sequences:
interpreting data and drawing conclusions, formulating and testing hypotheses,
identifying causes and effects.
The third level involves more abstract thinking. The questions are: What are
typical reasons for choosing one object or action over another? What are the
choices, alternatives, decisions? How can information be processed in an original
way?
Answering these questions successfully requires the use of thinking skills (middle
column), both lower-order thinking skills and higher-order thinking skills. Examples of
lower-order thinking skills for content include recalling facts, identifying vocabulary and
making definitions. Higher-order thinking skills involve using language to analyze,
synthesize, and evaluate. The overlap in terminology used for thinking skills and for
language functions (e.g., informing, explaining, analyzing, drawing conclusions,
evaluating) suggests a close relationship between language functions and levels of
thinking skills. The language functions needed for content activities requiring lowerorder thinking skills can usually be expressed with simple grammatical structures. On
the other hand, content-activities requiring higher-order thinking skills often involve
both more complex language and larger chunks of language (Chamot, OMalley, 1994).
In table 1 we want to show how the different components are integrated in CLIL
and give evidence that the acquisition of language is contextual to the use and
development of cognitive skills, as well as to the learning of subject content. Read
horizontally, this framework can describe a stage of learning (e.g., the learning of
concepts and their classification); however, in the vertical direction it indicates the stages
of a process: the identification of facts, their characteristics, their integration in the
sequences of a process, up to a higher stage of creativity and critical thinking. From an
educational standpoint this schema allows you to:
-
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A task is a workplan.
It involves a primary focus on the meaning: it incorporates some kind of gap, which
motivates learners to use language in order to close it.
Both exercises and tasks may have a place in the classroom, but it is clear that tasks
are, generally, the most appropriate for CLIL, as they are the typical activities of the
subject, with genres, cultural conventions and specific structures, which require the
students ability to rework knowledge and skills on their own.
We classified the activities produced in the first administration of the modules of the
partners, as seen in the framework proposal (table 2).
45
Learning Objectives
Strategies
Knowledge structure
Concepts /
description
Who?
What?
Where?
Lower-order TS (LOTS)
- recognize (words, elements)
- define
- identify
- classify
- describe (objects, elements)
-
Principles /
processes /
sequences
Creation /
evaluation /
choices
Higher-order TS (HOTS)
- elaborate information in a personal
way
- create
- evaluate
- make choices
As you can see, at the first level (concepts / description) we find activities short
questions, labeling activities, cloze, sentence completion, matching, true/false, multiple
46
choice usually used in language courses (the extent to which each of these types is
present in the modules of the project is shown in table 3).
Table 3. Activities involving LOTS
These activities have all the features of an exercise: they provide a single answer,
usually summarized in a word, a phrase or a simple sentence, or even without words, for
example, in matching activities where you simply have to link segments, phrases, words
or images; the creativity and autonomy of the student are not solicited in any way, but
simply his/her knowledge is assessed. It should be noted, however, that in a CLIL
context, this is never a purely linguistic knowledge; vocabulary, in particular, is not, or is
not only, a linguistic category; rather it indicates content related to a specific subject
area, such as concepts or processes in a scientific field:
It can be useful to divide the words of science into various types or
categories []. There are words naming words that denote identifiable,
observable, real objects or entities, [] other words process words may
denote processes that happen in science; []; the third category, the largest
one concept words denote concepts of various type. [Finally] there are
words that have both a scientific and an every day meaning, such as work,
energy, power (Wellington, Osborne, 2001: 20).
47
following a track-driven solution of problems. These are activities that have, in large
part, the characteristics of tasks that require thinking skills typical of subject learning,
such as solving problems, establishing relationships, explaining processes, transactions
at the highest level, but the creativity and autonomy of the student are limited since
these activities are supported by different types of scaffolding: frames, diagrams, maps ...
At the third level there are, in principle, the same activities typical of the subject
reports, laboratory sheets, presentations, simulations, role plays but the task of
organizing knowledge and skills is totally entrusted to the student and his creativity: the
student independently chooses the linguistic forms necessary to structure the outcomes.
Thus cognitive processes as well as analyzing, explaining, comparing and drawing
conclusions are conducted in an autonomous way without the support of scaffolding.
To what extent are the activities of the three levels described in the modules of the
project? Table 4 illustrates their distribution.
Table 4. AECLIL activities
More than half of the activities (55%) are at the first level and have the acquisition of
basic concepts as the objective; they verify individual knowledge, strongly supported by
scaffolding, and do not require student creativity. Moreover, in many modules (40%) all
activities are included at the first level without progressing to the next level.
To a lesser extent, the second level of the framework has more specific activities for
subject learning, such as the identification of principles and relationships and the
implementation of processes. But at this level tasks are strongly supported by
scaffolding.
Finally, examples of activities set at the third level of the framework are rare, that is
to say that there are only a few examples of outcomes requiring specific disciplinary
features elaborated autonomously by students.
The reasons for these choices have not been investigated, and these reasons may be
numerous: class levels, the experimental nature of CLIL in certain educational settings.
Nevertheless, more general causes cannot be excluded, such as the scarcity of detailed
studies on genres for the different subjects and, therefore, specific support activities.
The fact is that the real CLIL challenge is to reach high levels in disciplinary
competence using a foreign language as a vehicle.
48
ASSESSMENT TOOLS
A formative assessment not only has to be consistent with the objectives but also
provide clear feedback to the students to allow them to unequivocally identify their
shortcomings. So the framework described can be used not only for building activities
and learning paths to the desired level but also to develop tests for assessing and
measuring instruments for the outcomes and to provide relevant feedback (Barbero,
Maggi 2012). This framework has been used to develop the rubrics in the project
modules, as we will illustrate.
As regards measurement there is a substantial difference between the activities that
have the characteristics of an exercise and those which have the characteristics of a task.
In the first case, represented by activities such as cloze, matching, multiple choice, or
answers to closed questions, the answer generally can be just either right or wrong, while
in the second case, where the creativity of the student is involved, his/her ability
regarding personal revision, the response is not entirely predictable to a large degree.
While measuring outcomes identified as tasks is a complex operation that requires
specific tools (see next section), the measurement of exercises is not so problematic: you
only have to calculate the number of correct answers and give them a rating. The
numbers in themselves do not provide detailed feedback to students since no
description of the outcomes is provided.
Assessment of tasks
Traditional forms of assessment, where the performances are simply measured
through a score, are not appropriate for CLIL, where both content and language must
be enhanced and the activities to be developed are mostly real activities in a specific
field.
The assessment of tasks typical to the subject can be linked to what is called
authentic assessment.
Authentic assessment occurs when we associate the assessment to types of
work that real people do, rather than merely soliciting answers which only
require simple, easy to assess responses. Authentic assessment is an
appropriate verification of performance because through it we learn if
students can intelligently use what they have learned in situations which can
be linked to adult experiences, and if they can renew or change new
situations (Wiggins, 1998, mentioned in Serragiotto, 2007).
49
columns of descriptors, indicating the qualities of this performance and the corresponding
scores.
There are many advantages in using rubrics to evaluate both students and teachers.
Rubrics:
- provide feedback to teachers and students;
- represent a guide for students and teachers, much more explicit than a single
numerical score;
- make assessment more objective and consistent;
- reduce the amount of time teachers spend evaluating students work.
This potential is particularly useful in CLIL, where learning must be supported in its
different components and students guided toward awareness of their acquisitions.
There are mainly two types of rubrics: holistic and analytic.
Holistic rubrics
A holistic rubric evaluates the product or performance as a whole and describes the
activity at different quality levels, each of them corresponding to a score. It is a kind of
summative assessment as it requires the teacher to score the overall process or product
without judging the component parts separately (Mertler, 2001). The focus of a score in
a holistic rubric is on the global quality of a specific content and skills. Advantages in
holistic rubrics are quickness in scoring and the provision of an overview of student
achievement. A disadvantage is that it provides only a limited feedback (Taggart et al.,
1998). In table 5 there is an example of a holistic rubric, which was discussed by
partners during the second meeting in Perpignan.
Table 5. Example of a holistic rubric
Scores
1
Unsatisfactory
2
Almost satisfactory
3
Satisfactory
4
Good
5
Excellent
Descriptors
Student shows no knowledge of the subject and specific vocabulary.
Student is lacking necessary background knowledge and uses specific
vocabulary wrongly.
Student has essential knowledge of the subject. He uses specific
vocabulary correctly.
Student shows a complete knowledge of the subject. He properly uses
specific vocabulary.
Student shows a complete and thorough knowledge of the subject.
50
Analytic rubrics
Analytic rubrics are criterion-referenced and assess summative or formative
performances along several different dimensions (Taggart et al., 1998). The degree of
feedback offered to students is higher than in holistic rubrics. Therefore, the advantages
are the provision of a detailed assessment of the tasks and the creation of a profile of
specific student strengths and weaknesses (Mertler, 2001). The disadvantages are mostly
for the teacher: analytic rubrics are more time-consuming than holistic rubrics as
individual work should be examined separately for each of the specific criteria chosen to
assess the task.
An analytic rubric necessarily requires these components: an identified behaviour
within an assessment task; the characteristics of the task that will be assessed (criteria),
descriptors that describe proficiency levels of performance, a rating scale of scores, at three
or more levels of performance, to be used to rate students tasks (Taggart et al., 1998).
There must be total consistency among the learning goals, the choice of criteria and
the description and evaluation of the outcomes. This is particularly relevant in CLIL
since all its components must be involved. The conceptual framework described above
may fulfill this aim. This framework has been used to develop an analytic rubric of
reference (Barbero, Maggi, 2011), which was presented and discussed by partners in the
second meeting in Perpignan (see table 6).
Table 6. CONTENT - A general rubric
Score
Topic:
Concepts
Classification
Identifies concepts,
classifies them and
formulates verifiable
hypotheses on
process / problem
solving
Identifies concepts,
classifies them and
formulates
hypotheses on
process / problem
solving
Identifies concepts,
classifies them and
formulates
hypotheses on
incorrect process /
problem solving
Principles
Sequences
Performs the
procedures, collects
and organizes data,
makes appropriate
conclusions
Performs the
procedures, collects
and organizes data,
makes approximate
conclusions
Performs the
procedures, collects
and organizes data,
makes wrong
conclusions
Evaluation
Creativity
The conclusions
have no relationship
with the concepts
and assumptions
made
51
This is obviously a rubric of a general nature which must be adapted to each specific
situation. The different levels in knowledge structure concepts, principles and
relationships, evaluation and creativity referred to a specific content may be adopted
as criteria in an analytic rubric.
Rubrics are precisely open lists that must be continually updated and adapted. So one
of the partners (Hacettepe University, Ankara, Turkey) proposes a specific rubric for the
experiments and laboratory reports, and indicates criteria involving both concepts and
processes / relationships as we can see in the specific rubric for the experiments and
laboratory reports, which and indicates criteria involving both concepts and processes /
relationships (table 7). This kind of rubric integrates language in content and is the
vehicle to express content and organize information at different levels of complexity:
description / classification, process / relationships, and choices. In other words, it is the
CALP functions that are developed.
Table 7. Assessment rubric for experimental studies
Assessment
criteria
Defining the
research problem
and providing
hypotheses
Grades
2 complete
Formulates a focused
problem and provides
reasonable hypotheses.
1 partial
0 not at all
Formulates a focused
problem but does not
provide reasonable
hypotheses.
Making
observations
Data collecting
and processing
Records appropriate
data with mistakes or
processes the
quantitative data
incorrectly.
52
Drawing the
conclusion
Evaluating the
procedure
Interpretation of
the results
Makes correct
explanations using an
appropriate theoretical
model.
Makes valid
explanations using a
range of familiar
science concepts.
Report the
experiment
Consistent
grammatical
control and
appropriate use
of vocabulary.
Fluency
Can express
and
him/herself
Interaction with a natural
flow and
interact with
ease.
Good
grammatical
control and
generally
appropriate
use of
vocabulary.
A few
mistakes in
grammar and
vocabulary use
do not lead to
misunderstanding.
Systematically
makes
mistakes in
grammar and
vocabulary use
but the
message is
generally clear.
The systematic
grammar
mistakes and the
narrow range of
vocabulary
makes the
message
meaningless.
Can express
him/herself
and interact
with a good
degree of
fluency.
Can express
him/herself
and interact
with a
reasonable
degree of
fluency.
Can manage
the discourse
and the
interaction
with effort
and must be
helped.
The
communication
is totally
dependent on
repetition,
rephrasing and
repair.
53
It is clear that for language rubrics the scales of the Common European Framework for
Languages (2001) can be of support in the preparation of descriptors.
Other fields could be investigated and assessed, such as ICT knowledge or
cooperative work, in which case specific criteria must be provided. Examples of criteria
for cooperative work may be found in the rubrics of the AECLIL-modules (The
Earth, Our House; Kinetic Energy and Work; Redox Reactions).
Steps to follow in a process of authentic assessment
In short, the steps to follow in a process of authentic assessment as well as in the
teachers assessment questions may be the following (Barbero, Maggi, 2011):
1. Providing authentic tasks: What tasks are typical of that subject?
2. Developing a set of standards consistent with the teaching objectives: What will
students be able to do?
3. Identifying the criteria: What are the essential elements of the task?
4. Identifying competence levels for each criterion (generally between two and five)
and attributing a score for each level: What is the level of competence achieved?
5. Finding competence descriptors for each level and for each criterion. Descriptors
may be expressed synthetically (for example: excellent, good, satisfactory, almost
satisfactory, unsatisfactory, or: complete, partial, not at all), or analytically: How can
integrated skills be described for each score and in relation to each criterion?
6. Creating a scored rubric to be drawn upon and adapted to each performance: What
kind of feedback is provided to the learner?
CONCLUSIONS
Searching for a European CLIL evaluation model, we have come to some basic
conclusions. First, the methodological research on CLIL in Europe is unanimous in
underlining the priority of content, even in a dual-focused teaching / learning context.
This leads us to consider that assessment in CLIL should be more like the models
offered by the disciplines than those commonly used in language lessons.
As regards in particular the role of language, the point is not to decide whether or
not language should be evaluated separately from the content, but to see how it integrates
with the content. For this purpose we used Mohans taxonomy, which proposes a
content classification for levels of cognitive difficulty and their corresponding linguistic
expression. This taxonomy, used in a previous European project on CLIL, was then
further improved with particular reference to the present project to include all CLIL
components: content, communication & culture, cognition.
The activities produced in the modules were classified using precisely this
framework, and it was observed that most of them are located at the first level: namely,
the knowledge of individual elements or concepts, which, from a linguistic point of
view, is expressed primarily through lexical elements and simple structures.
54
The measurement of these activities, which are normally closed questions cloze,
matching, multiple choice, true/false does not cause particular problems because the
scores are awarded based on the number of correct answers. Some teachers, however, in
order to make the assessment a true training tool (assessment for learning) provided
descriptors for each of the scores, which offer the student a more explicit feedback than
simple voting.
More complex is the assessment and evaluation of activities that involve the
creativity of the student and where the answer is not, or not entirely, predictable. These
are simply the typical activities of the discipline, such as reports of laboratory
experiments, role play for management, just to mention some examples from the
project. They involve a set of knowledge and skills and the ability to revise and make
personal choices.
An evaluation model for CLIL should have the characteristics of authentic
assessment and assume its procedures.
In the AECLIL Project we have adopted the framework of the above criteria to
identify descriptors within a matrix of reference. This matrix has been variously adapted
and integrated by the partners, who have proposed criteria referring both to the content
alone, to both the content and language separately, and to the working methods. In this
sense the Project is a step forward in the search for a model of assessment in CLIL,
although much remains to be done, especially in the search for common criteria and
descriptors for the different disciplines.
REFERENCES
Anderson L.W., Krathwohl D.R. (eds.), 2001: A Taxonomy for Learning, Teaching, and
Assessing: A revision of Blooms Taxonomy of Educational Objectives, Longman, New
York.
Baker C., 2006 (4th edition): Foundations of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, Multilingual
Matters, Clevedon.
Barbero T., 2009: Assessment in CLIL, in Jrvinen H. (ed.), Language in Content
Instruction, University of Turku / European Commission.
Barbero T., Maggi F., 2011: Assessment and Evaluation in CLIL, in Marsh D., Meyer
O., Quality Interfaces, EAP, Eichstaett Academic Press UG, Eichsttt.
Barbero T., 2012: Innovative Assessment for an innovative Approach,
PERSPECTIVES A Journal of TESOL Italy, Special Issue on CLIL, Vol. XXXVII,
n. 2, Fall 2010.
Briggs M., Woodfield A., Martin C., Swatton P., 2008: Assessment for Learning and Teaching,
Learning Matters, Exeter.
Chamot A, OMalley M., 1994: The CALLA Book, Implementing the Cognitive Academic
Language Learning Approach, Pearson Education, Longman, Buckingham.
Commission of the European Communities, 2003: Promoting Language Learning and
Linguistic Diversity: An Action Plan 2004 2006:
http://ec.europa.eu/education/doc/official/keydoc/actlang/act_lang_en.pdf
55
Coyle D., Hood Ph., Marsh D., 2010: CLIL, Content and Language Integrated Learning,
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Council of Europe: Education A platform of resources and references for plurilingual and
intercultural education:
http://www.coe.int/t/dg4/linguistic/langeduc/le_platformintro_EN.asp.
Cummins J., 2000: Language, Power and Pedagogy, Multilingual Matters, Clevedon.
Ellis R., 2003: Task-based Language Learning and Teaching, Oxford University Press,
Oxford.
European Commission, Eurydice, The information network on education in Europe,
2006: Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) at School in Europe:
http://ec.europa.eu/languages/documents/studies/clil-at-school-ineurope_en.pdf.
Jrvinen H. (ed.), 2009: Language in Content Instruction, Handbook, University of Turku:
http://lici.utu.fi/materials/LICI_Handbook_EN.pdf), (last access 6/8/2012).
Llinares A., Morton T., Whittaker R., 2012: ,The Roles of Language in CLIL, Cambridge
University Press, Cambridge.
Mertler, Craig A., 2001: Designing scoring rubrics for your classroom. Practical assessment, Research
& Evaluation. Available online: http://pareonline.net/getvn.asp?v=7&n=25 (last
access 29/10/2012).
Mohan B., 1986: Language and Content, Addison-Wesley Pusblishing Company, Reading,
Massachussetts.
Serragiotto G., 2007: Assessment and Evaluation in CLIL, in Marsh D., Wolff D. (eds.),
Diverse Contexts, Converging Goals, Peter Lang, Frankfurt am Main
Short D., 1993: Assessing Integrated Language and Content Instruction, Tesol Quarterly, Vol.
27, No. 4.
Taggart G., Phifer S., Nixon J., Wood M., 1998: Rubrics, A Handbook for Construction and
Use, Technomic Publishing Co., Lancaster, Basel.
Wellington J., Osborne J., 2001: Language and Literacy in Science Education, Open
University Press, Philadelphia.
Wiggins G., 1998: Educative Assessment. Designing assessment to inform and improve student
performance, Jossey Bass, San Francisco, CA.
56
EVALUATION IN CLIL
Fabrizio Maggi
57
58
59
4. Levels of satisfaction:
a) perceptions of usefulness and success of diverse aspects of the bilingual programme
including the early introduction of an L2 in primary education, the increase in L2
provision via content integrated learning and the scope of the programme from the
perspective of numbers involved.
Starting from these ambitious cornerstones we propose the table summarizing the
main elements and factors concerning evaluation that a teacher should be familiar with
in the following page.
EVALUATION: A Scaffolding Framework for Teachers
KNOWLEDGE: CLIL teachers should have a good hnowledge on:
different approaches to evaluation and assessment and their interpretation;
key concepts in assessment, such as reliability, validity, criteria, goals;
the relationship between assessment methods, learning styles and teaching styles;
different stages and purposes of CLIL assessment, diagnostic, formative,
summative;
the implications for CLIL assessment of the links between cognitive operations and
academic language skills;
the relationship between metacognition and CLIL evaluation and assessment
practices;
how the CEFR can be used as an evaluation and assessment tool in CLIL contexts.
QUALITIES: CLIL teachers need appreciate:
the importance of using a variety of assessment techniques in CLIL;
the importance of validity in assessing content and language;
the importance of transparency in evaluation criteria for CLIL;
the need for assessment techniques to take into account multiple intelligences,
different learning styles etc.;
that errors are a natural part of learning;
the importance of constructive feedback focused on what CLIL learners can do;
the need to balance assessment of progress in the subject with that of language;
the interdependence of content, thinking skills and language in learners production.
SKILLS: CLIL teachers need to be able to:
become familiar with and use a range of assessment methods and tools;
use appropriate assessment techniques for the different stages in the learning
process in CLIL;
articulate topics and criteria for the assessment of content and the different language
skills;
to share assessment criteria with CLIL learners;
foster CLIL students metacognitive awareness by providing appropriate tools for
self-assessment;
60
to encourage CLIL students to use these tools to frame comments about their own
learning process;
to assess their own language use.
TASKS: CLIL teachers can develop the Knowledge Quality Skills evaluation by:
selecting and designing appropriate assessment methods for specific CLIL courses;
devising and using observation and evaluation grids;
reflecting in a structured way on their own assessment practices;
carrying out observations on assessment practices;
providing formative feedback on samples of CLIL students work;
carrying out error analyses and using these as a learning tool;
devising and implementing tools to develop metacognitive awareness;
reflecting on and assessing their own language use.
FINAL PRODUCTS: CLIL teachers can provide evidence of competence with:
reflective reports on their use of different assessment tools in CLIL;
essays and projects in which they show understanding of key concepts in evaluation
and assessment, as applied to CLIL;
examples of CLIL assessment tools appropriate for different learning styles and
intelligences.
plans and schedules in which appropriate assessment points and methods are
identified;
examples of assessment tools which integrate content, thinking and language (such
as rubrics, grids etc.);
examples of spoken and written formative and summative feedback to CLIL
learners;
examples of applications of the CEFR in specific CLIL situations.
(Adapted from CLIL across context, http://clil.uni.lu;
http://www.alte.org/2011/presentations/pdf/sabina-nowak.pdf)
61
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Use of the language of learning: the most common and comfortable situations.
Strategies of learning: the most useful strategies and tools to accomplish the tasks.
What is most important when speaking the second language.
The problems encountered during the modules.
General considerations about the modules.
It would be interesting to note, as a starting point, how the students answered the
first question in the questionnaire, that is How do you consider your learning
experience in the CLIL module?.
The questionnaires show very
positive results, with 41% of
important and 38% of very
important answers concerning
the evaluation of the whole CLIL
learning experience.
1. Use of the language of learning: the most common and comfortable situations.
Questionnaire Answer (QA): In which of these situations have you used the foreign language and how
often?
always/often
60
often
sometimes
50
seldom/never
40
30
20
10
0
oral adress class
discussion
interview
62
group work
60
often
sometimes
50
seldom/never
40
30
20
10
0
oral adress class
discussion
interview
oral interchange
teacher
oral interchang
mates
group work
The most frequent situations in which the language of learning is used are the
interaction with the teacher (often 41%) and the interaction with the class (always
51%), while communication during group work, interviews, discussion and interchange
with mates received similar average results. The answers declaring the most
comfortable situation of use confirm the previous results, showing that oral
addressing to the class (51%) and oral interchange with teacher (41%) are perceived
as the most comfortable situations in which to use the second language.
2. Strategies of learning: the most useful strategies and tools to accomplish the
tasks
QA: Which strategies did you find more useful to accomplish the tasks?
The students answers show that the most useful strategies to accomplish the task are
using the examples presented by the teacher (very useful 53%, useful 40%) listening
to teachers explanations (51%) and using images, grids or graphs as a stimulus to
63
speak (50%). The strategies considered less useful are repetition of what was
previously heard, read or written (not useful 14%), followed by trying to express
orally using own words what was previously heard, read or written (not useful 13%).
QA: Which tools used by teachers have been more helpful?
Audio/Visual aids: 180
Practical examples: 96
Web links: 123
Realia: 80
With a total of 180 answers out of 281, the use of audio/visual aids as a stimulus to
speak was considered the most helpful tool to learn, followed by the use of web links,
which was chosen by 123 students (see graphic in CLIL Modules in this book).
3. What is most important when speaking the second language
QA: What did you consider important when speaking in a foreign language in this module (in a
subject)?
Not important
correct pronunciation
Partially important
Important
improvisation
Very important
vocabulary knowledge
contents knowledge
grammar correctness
clare exposition
reformulate
10
20
30
64
40
50
60
70
80
When speaking in the second language the students consider most important the
knowledge of vocabulary (very important 73%), followed by the knowledge of
contents (66%). It is interesting to note that grammar correctness was not
considered a relevant aspect when speaking the language of learning. The least
important aspect is the use of facial expressions, gestures and body movements (not
important 45%).
4. The problems encountered during the modules
QA: What problems did you have?
The most common problem for students was the difficulty of the language of
materials (always 24%, often 26%) and that the pace of the lesson was too high
(always 16%, often 25%). Another frequent problem was the difficulty of teachers
explanations and questions (always 17%, often 19%). The less frequent problems were
that the students didnt like the topic of the module (72%) and the way the module
was presented (70%).
5. General considerations on the modules.
QA: Did this module help you improve your ability to express yourself in the foreign language?
A lot
10%
4%
34%
Enough
Partially important
Not important
52%
65
QA: How do you evaluate your learning of the subject studied in the foreign language?
Very important
18%
3%
43%
Important
Partially important
36%
Not important
QA: Do you think this CLIL experience will be useful for you?
Very important
18%
3%
Important
43%
Partially important
36%
Not important
CLIL
NON CLIL
92%
YES : 92%
NO : 8%
QA: If given the choice between CLIL and non CLIL experiences, which would you prefer?
8%
Yes
No
CLIL: 92%
NON CLIL: 8%
92%
66
Unfortunately we only have one example of peer assessment throughout the project
and the data is not enough to provide viable feedback. Peer assessment can help the
learners to understand what is expected of them. For example, by reading a fellow
learners lab report in biology and deciding what is good about it and what needs more
work, learners develop a clearer idea of what makes a good lab report in terms of both
subject and language. This will help them to produce higher quality lab reports in the
future. By acting as an audience for a piece of written text, learners start to understand
how clearly they need to express their ideas for a third person to understand them. This
is particularly important in CLIL, because it can help improve both language skills and
subject skills. By experiencing the effect of unclear language, spelling mistakes or
confused ideas themselves, learners will be encouraged to use language more carefully to
get their ideas across.
-
Clearly, the benefits are more than the drawbacks, because peer assessment:
provides an insight into individual learning achievements;
gives information for evaluating the teaching program;
provides an enriching teaching strategy that engages students in their learning;
gives further information in order to plan teaching and learning to meet individual
student needs;
- enables the targeting of realistic outcomes for students;
- enables students to become aware of their strengths and the areas that need
improvement.
-
67
b.
Content acquisition
c.
Concepts development
d.
Involvement in communication
e.
Use of L2
f.
Problem-solving activities
g.
Individual behaviour
h.
1
lacking
2
adequate
3
good
4
excellent
DIFFICULTIES ENCOUNTERED
WHAT INTERESTED ME MOST
Specific issues:
The strategies used and how often:
a.
Always or
very often
68
Often
Sometimes
Seldom/
never
f.
Very
important
Important
Partially
important
Not
important
grammatical correctness
g. clarity of exposition
h. the ability to reformulate
i.
j.
others:
Always or
very often
a.
b. a. I did not know grammar in the
c.
foreign language.
d.
e.
f. b. I did not know enough vocabulary
g.
in the foreign language.
h.
i.
j. c. I did not know the contents of the
k.
non-linguistic subject.
l.
69
Often
Sometimes
Seldom/
never
m.
n. d. I did not understand the teachers
o.
questions.
p.
q.
r. e. I was not interested in the nons.
linguistic subject.
t.
u.
v. f. Others:
a.
d.
e.
f.
i.
Others:
70
Peer:
You can do
this.
Comments
TEACHERS EVALUATION
How do you evaluate your learning of the subject studied in the foreign language?
The teachers questionnaire so far has had 46 replies: 27 from Italy, 10 from Bulgaria,
4 Romania, 3 from Spain, and 1 each from Latvia and Turkey, with an overall female /
male ratio of 44:2. Both males were Italian.
Both questionnaires were designed to provide feedback data on the CLIL modules as
described in the AECLIL website. As regards the Italian CLIL modules, 15 have so far
been produced and applied in 9 schools, so that each school uses an average of 1.7
modules. Each module has different content relating to a different subject. The subjects
covered so far include: biology, science, chemistry, history, information technology,
maths, physics and geography. The production of the modules was governed by a
checklist of available criteria, such as the modules themselves, for inspection on the
AECLIL website. It was thus possible to correlate the responses and opinions given in
the questionnaire to the basic data, i.e., the modules content and the principles inspiring
them.
All the teachers participated in the project produced project-specific materials.
Overall, about 65 teachers participating in the project. As stated earlier, 46 have replied
to the questionnaire. 27 (90%) of the total cohort of 30 Italian teachers have thus given
their assessment. All the participating schools in Italy are located in Lombardy,
specifically in the province of Pavia. All 9 schools are represented in the teachers
evaluation as are all the modules. The same is not true, at least so far, for the students
with replies from only 6 schools despite the active participation in the project in other
ways.
Effectively the teachers are commenting on the success of their own work; in the
case of Italy pairs of teachers worked on each module, one a language teacher, one a
content teacher. In the case of Bulgaria all 10 teachers have replied to the questionnaire
relating to the three modules they produced. In this case, 6 teachers produced the 3
modules in the same way as did the Italian teachers: one content teacher paired with a
language teacher. However, in this case 4 additional teachers tested the materials
produced by the other 6 colleagues from other schools. In the case of Romania, the 4
teachers tested their own modules.
Currently only 2 teachers, i.e., one class, have implemented the student-as-teacher
proposal mentioned in the previous section. The others used a standard CLIL
procedure.
I selected only what I thought were the most relevant questions from the teacher
questionnaire.
Material provided
This question provides 5 categories for the materials provided in each module. In
part this is a critical self-assessment on the part of the participant teachers vis-a-vis the
criteria that guided them in the construction of the module content. What is interesting
is the rejection of ready-made copied materials, less than 20% suggesting that creativity
is a major factor in teachers motivation to teach and test (Baldry, 2009: 18).
71
Classroom organization
The data regarding the classroom organization is interesting.
As you can see, frontal lessons are the major teaching technique employed by
teachers, but group and pair work are relevant. I think that the effects of the digital age
should be such that the reliance on frontal teaching should diminish vis-a-vis other
forms of classroom and non-classroom organization since the digital revolution should
encourage alternative forms.
Monitoring techniques
72
Referring to the data on classroom organization, we are not surprised that written
tests and feedback are the most popular ways to evaluate student performances and
outcomes. Similarly, we can appreciate the fact that self-evaluation does not play a
marginal role.
CONCLUSIONS
This chapter has explored the last stages in the AECLIL Project and the map the
pathway if you prefer it is tracing for CLIL assessment.
Special emphasis has been placed on self-assessment. This kind of assessment
encourages students to take ownership of their work through reflection and discussion
about the learning process and results. Students are consequently more aware of the
learning goals, both with regard to the subject knowledge as well as the language
aspects, and are able to integrate this awareness into their own achievements, getting a
feeling for progress and personal success. They also enhance their language
performance, learn to distinguish between various registers, and become sensitive to
subtle lexical and grammatical differences in meaning (Poisel, Feltham, 2009).
Students develop communicative and interpersonal strategies to give helpful
qualitative feedback to their peers. Students also acquire intercultural competence
through analyzing and reflecting on different conventions and customs, especially in a
multicultural classroom, which is an increasingly common occurrence in our classrooms.
A paragraph has also been devoted to understanding what teachers think of this
experience, with particular reference to classroom organization and monitoring tools.
Through tables, charts and meaning-compressing diagrams we tried to link this
project to the practice theory applied to assessment. We are perfectly aware that a lot
has to be explored in the field of assessment and evaluation in CLIL, but our
achievements can represent a very god starting point for further analysis and
investigation.
REFERENCES
Bertaux P., Coonan C., Frigols-Martn M.J., Mehisto P., 2009: The CLIL Teachers
Competences Grid:
http://www.ccn-clil.eu/index.php?name=Content&nodeIDX=3857.
Coyle D., Hood P., Marsh D., 2010: CLIL, Content and Language Integrated Learning.
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Council of Europe, 2001: Common European Framework of Reference for Languages,
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Jger Reinhold S., 2000: Von der Beobachtung zur Notengebung. Ein Lehrbuch, Empirische
Pdagogik, Landau.
Lorenzo F., Carsal S., Moor P., 2009: The Effects of Content and Language Integrated
Learning in European Education: Key Findings from the Andalusian Bilingual
73
74
CLIL MODULES
Elena Voltan
3 From
now on (*).
75
Secondary School
Bulgaria Lyce professionnel
dconomie G.S Rakovsky Yambol
La monnaie (A2)
Le crdit (A2)
Economics of Enterprises (B1-B2
Nutrition (B1-B2)
Triangles (B1-B2)
76
University Education
Turkey Hacettepe University
Ankara
Moreover, besides these subjects closely related to the school curriculum, the
presence of in-service teacher training contexts has enabled the creation of modules
specific to these teaching areas (3 modules).
Some more observations to highlight the relevance of the variety present-ed so far.
In fact, a matching among all the variables considered would allow us to make some
considerations, at least partially, about the applicability of CLIL modules. It would be
possible to compare, each time, modules belonging to the same subject area but with
differences in the language level or in student age. See, for example, the modules Le
crdit and Young Entrepreneurs. A Business Simulation, both in the field of economics for
secondary students, but the first certifying an A2 level while the second a B1-B2 level,
or the case of the physics modules Kinetic Energy and Work and Force and Movement, which
differ only in the students age, the first being designed for university students and the
second for secondary school students. Otherwise, it would be interesting to compare
CLIL modules designed for same-age students or with the same language level but
belonging to different subject areas; see, for example, modules such as the Nachhaltige
Entwicklung und erneuerbare Energien in the field of geography and the history module
Absolutism in England and on the Continent, both designed for secondary school students
with a B1 language level, the chemistry module Periodic table of Elements, or Photosynthesis
in the field of biology. Such a comparison among modules would permit us to point
out, once the common features have been recognized, the specificities related to each
variable, e.g., the subject area or the language lev-el in planning, realizing and
implementing a CLIL module.
Moreover, once the variables specific to each module with its peculiar features
concerning the planning and the classroom delivery are defined, the proper
characteristics of the CLIL teaching approach will come out, such as the interaction
activities in the classroom, the prevalence of using the language rather than its explicit
knowledge, the use of authentic and differentiated inputs, and the use of a wide range of
teaching materials, tools and facilities.
77
All the modules with their resources can be consulted on the CD. In the following
chapters some of the modules delivered will be illustrated, with the aim of representing
all the variables previously considered: i.e., the language, the subject areas, the level and
the type of the school they are designed for.
For primary school science modules in English, The Earth, Our House will be
presented. For secondary schools, it will be possible to consult two mod-ules in English
in the fields of science, with the module Nutrition, and chem-istry, with the module
Redox Reactions: a way to produce energy, as well as a module of economics in French, Le
crdit, and a geography module in German, Nachhaltige Entwicklung und erneuerbare Energien.
At the level of university education, a physics module in English will be illustrated,
Kinetic Energy and Work, and, finally, two modules, Learning CLIL through CLIL and CLIL
through CLIL, will represent the field of the in-service teacher training.
Each module is presented so that it may be possible to notice the character-istics
related to its planning as well as those related to its application and classroom delivery.
After some general information about the target group, the language, the teaching
context and the subject area, the aims of the module are presented, divided into those
regarding competence both in the content and in the language aspects and those
regarding the acquisition of social work skills. Subsequently the strategies and the
activities that are proposed in the module are introduced, as well as the outcomes and
expected results and, in the end, the assessment activities and tools and the evaluation
criteria.
Some comments are necessary on assessment and evaluation, which is the main
outcome of the AECLIL Project. In the presentation of the modules the assessment
activities are described and the rubrics and grids (*) used for each module are illustrated.
It is important to note that we are dealing with rubrics and grids that collect a range
of criteria and descriptors which are common to all the modules produced in the project
and which are expected to be applied as tools for the evaluation process in CLIL
modules in general. For an in-depth examination of the process and reflections that led
to the creation of these assessment and evaluation tools see Assessment Tools and Practices
in CLIL and Evaluation in CLIL in this book. On the other hand, it seems relevant to the
present dis-cussion to underline the high flexibility of these evaluation tools that have
been used in the variety of teaching contexts previously presented.
In the presentation of the modules it is also possible to find a detailed description of
the classroom activities carried out, each presented through the steps of the students
activities, the tools and resources, and the assessing activities designed for each of them.
Finally, space is dedicated to the consid-erations and comments that the teachers
decided to share about their CLIL experience (*) from the perspective of a continuous
action-research practice.
THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE MODULES
All the CLIL modules produced inside the AECLIL Project and presented here were
initially drafted before November 2010, subsequently undergoing further examinations
and revisions that led to their present form. In every revision all different aspects of a
CLIL module have been taken into account in an integrated way, considering on the one
hand the aspects that specifically concern each module in itself and, on the other, those
that are most related to the CLIL approach.
78
Regarding the first level, the aims of a module, the planning of its classroom delivery,
the variety of the materials, and the coherence between its assessment activities and
tools and the strategies and tasks carried out have been analysed. According to the CLIL
approach, on the other hand, the integration between content and language, the
managing of the collaborative space of learning, and the validity of the assessment and
evaluation tools are supposed to be the most revealing features.
A FIRST ANALYSIS: MODULE PLANNING AND LESSON DELIVERY
The modules were first analysed by means of a pattern of analysis, the Checklist (see
Appendix), structured in order to point out the different parameters related to the CLIL
methodology and the CLIL activators (*). Thus each module has been analyzed from
the point of view of both module planning and lesson delivery.
As regards module planning, the aims of the module, the expected outcomes, the
4Cs of CLIL, that is, content, cognition, communication and culture (*), were
considered (Coyle 2007; see also Teaching and Learning with CLIL in this book).
Some parameters were introduced in the module planning analysis to evaluate the
assessment planning; that is, the presence of formative or summative assessments
(Kunnan, 1999) and the definition of criteria and descriptors as tools to enable an
integrated evaluation of all CLIL components. This last aspect is, in fact, what has
mostly influenced the following steps of the AECLIL Project along with the two
implementations carried out, underlining the importance of realizing tools for the
evaluation in CLIL.
As regards the level of the lesson delivery, this has been examined taking notice of
the lesson planning, the choice of the activities, the selection of tools and teaching
materials, the identification of the teaching strategies that are most effective in order to
link new information with previous knowledge (e.g., KWL strategy, brainstorming,
questions, key words), make input comprehensible (e.g. verbal scaffolding, visual aids,
key vocabulary emphasizing, speech tuning, graphic organizers), and support learning
(e.g. frames, cubing, imitative writing).
Table 2. A frame to analyze the Lesson Delivery
CONTENT
LINK TO PAST
LEARNING
KWL strategy
Brainstorming
Questions
Key-words
MAKING INPUT
COMPREHENSIBLE
Verbal scaffolding
Visual aids
Key vocabulary
emphasizing
Speech tuning
Graphic organizers
CLASSROOM ACTIVITIES
SUPPORT
LEARNING
Frames
Cubing
Imitative
writing
79
Teachers speech
Individual activities
Pair work
Group work
Warm up
Multimedia
Internet research
Laboratory activities
Presentations
In-class talk
Finally, the classroom management activities were considered (e.g., individual, pair
and group work, warm up, teachers speech, multimedia support and Internet research),
with particular attention to those activities that, according to the CLIL approach, make
the learning environment a collaborative space (*) in which a prominent role is played
by group work activities (see Table 3) peculiar to the co-operative learning method
(Edwards, Mercer, 1987).
Table 3. Classroom Activities (proportions derived from the data collected from 28 modules).
Teacher's speech
Group w ork
Pair w ork
Indiv idual activ ities
Multimedia
Warm up
Internet research
All modules were analyzed and commented on in order to carry out both an
evaluation and a self-evaluation for the purpose of modifying the mod-ules during the
first implementation, which took place between March and June 2011.
After the first implementation
All modules were implemented by the partners who created the modules themselves
or, in some cases, by other partners. After the first implementation all modules were
analysed and evaluated a second time by the teachers and students who actually tried
them out (see Evaluation in CLIL).
The Teacher questionnaire and the Student questionnaire (see Appendix) represented the
tools to collect the evaluations and the comments about the modules and to highlight
their strong and weak points. In fact, the administration of these questionnaires clearly
revealed the aspects related to the strategies required to activate the CLIL methodology,
dealing in particular with classroom management.
In the Teacher questionnaire the teachers involved in the administration of the modules
were asked to report the aspects related to the structure of the module they tried out as
well as to the classroom management. The questionnaire first took into consideration
the aims of each module, evaluating its didactic focus (the integration of content and
80
language), the activities proposed, whether based on repetitive operations or not, how
complex or creative were the operations required and, finally, whether the activities were
differentiated or not.
Regarding the classroom management, this was considered from the perspective of
the level of interaction in the classroom, taking into account the presence and frequency
of interaction among students and between students and teacher, for instance, in
individual, pair or group works, as well as with regard to the learning environment.
Furthermore, teachers were provided with a Teacher self-evaluation questionnaire (see
Appendix) in which they were asked to express their impressions and their own
considerations about the effectiveness of the strategies, activities and tools they used to
accomplish the CLIL methodology. They were also asked to record their opinions on
how and how much the CLIL experience (*) influenced their personal teaching
experience, as well as to point out the difficulties they might have encountered during
the administration.
The students were asked about the same topics through the Student questionnaire,
where they expressed their comments about the effectiveness and the relevance of the
activities they were provided with. In addition, they reported their opinions about the
importance and the prevalence of some language abilities over others, as well as about
the utility of the materials and the tools used.
On the base of the results gathered from both questionnaires, during the planning of
the second implementation it was possible to consider some aspects that emerged as
relevant in the CLIL modules and so to carry out some modifications on the first
version implemented.
TOWARDS
The second implementation took place before February 2012 and the same modules
as in the first implementation were tested, revised and modified according to the results
and considerations collected, as previously mentioned. What is important to note is the
kind of modifications that were carried out and how. Thus, it is possible to say that what
was considered while planning and delivering the definitive version of the modules
were, on the one hand, the structure and planning of the module itself and, on the
other, the specificity of assessment and evaluation in CLIL.
With regard to the first of these two aspects, module planning, the need clearly
emerged to satisfy the double-sided aspect of the modules which, on the one hand,
show the components of the CLIL approach and, on the other, the specificities that
arise from the characteristics of each module itself, according to the teaching context
and the aims it is designed for. The same dual needs to be satisfied were managed by
analysing the second level of analysis: the assessment and evaluation process. On the
one hand, the need for assessment and evaluation tools consistent with the aims and
specific aspects of each module and, on the other, the need to create an evaluation tool
able to account for the characteristics inherent in CLIL.
An initial analysis at the level of module planning required verifying the adequacy of
the tasks according to the language competence of the students. In fact, of basic
importance to CLIL is the real integration between the development of the language
81
competence, that is functions, structures and vocabulary, and the competence in the
contents to be learnt. Thus, according to the teaching context, the students age,
educational background and language proficiency, the integration can be achieved by
providing the students with a wide range of tasks, materials and inputs by means of
which new language and content items are conveyed. The variety of inputs exposes
students to a language which is as much as possible authentic as well as helping to
develop the main communicative skills, facilitating in this way the learning of content as
well. The variety of tasks entails the use of a wide range of tools, strategies and
techniques that, in turn, require the activation of many different thinking skills, both
lower and higher, by means of an appropriate scaffolding (*).
It would be interesting to note what emerges from the data presented in the
following graph, which shows the answers given by a sample of 281 students when
asked Which tools used by teachers have been more helpful? (see Student questionnaire
in Appendix). With a total of 180 answers out of 281, the use of audio/visual aids as a
stimulus to speaking was considered the most helpful tool to learn, followed by the use
of web links, chosen by 123 students.
Table 4. Teaching tools
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
Also clearly emerging in this phase was the need for the thinking skills involved in a
module to be consistent with the aims of the module itself and with the assessment
activities and the evaluation criteria and descriptors. Therefore, the considerations that
led to the second administration concerned first the variety of the didactic techniques
mostly used in the modules. The survey on techniques, as well as the perception that
students and teachers had about them, was of primary importance both in the module
planning phase and during the definition of the classroom management. In this regard,
special attention was paid to the prevalence of the development of language use over its
explicit knowledge.
From the answers given by students when asked: In which of these situations have
you used the foreign language and how often? (see Student questionnaire and Evaluation in
CLIL in this book) what primarily emerged was the prevalence of language use during
the interaction between the teacher and the class.
In fact, with regard to this last point, the presence of interaction activities in the
classroom was also noted among peers or with the teacher; e.g., with pair, group or in
plenum work. The table below shows the proportions for the five communicative skills
82
involved in the classroom activities that emerged from the first survey and which were
then confirmed by the results from the Teacher and Student questionnaires.
Table 5. The proportions of the four communicative activities in the modules (data collected from 28
modules).
Reading
Listening
Interacting
Speaking
Writing
83
in the descriptors might be quite different from one module to another, also from the
perspective of their future applications, what is important to highlight is that the
descriptors and criteria in each grid are meant to evaluate tasks and content that show
the same level of complexity.
One of the rubric created for the project, the Holistic rubric (see module Le credit and
table 5 in Assessment Tools and Practices in CLIL) presents descriptors and scores, so it is
appropriate to check specific knowledge, such as in activities where only one answer is
required, for example, multiple choice or true/false, and where students creativity is not
required.
The same rubric was combined with laboratory performances and also applied to
scientific modules, as we can see in table 6, which is part of the chemistry module
Periodic Table of Elements. The integrations to the Holistic rubric are shown in bold.
Table 6. Assessment rubric for experimental studies
SCORES
DESCRIPTORS
1
Unsatisfactory
2
Almost satisfactory
3
Satisfactory
4
Good
5
Excellent
The structure of the Analytic grid instead can show criteria concerning content,
language and, in most cases, co-operative work. This grid is meant to be used in order to
84
REFERENCES
Bachman L.F., Palmer A.S., 1996: Language testing in practice, Oxford University Press,
Oxford.
Coyle D., 2007: Content and Language Integrated Learning, in Encyclopedia for Language
Learning, vol.4, Springer-Verlag, Berlin.
Cummins J., 2000: Language, Power and Pedagogy, Multilingual Matters, Clevedon.
Edwards D., Mercer N., 1987: Common Knowledge: The Development of Understanding in the
Classroom, Methuen, London.
Kunnan A.J., 1999: Recent developments in language testing, in Annual Review of
Applied Linguistics, 19, p. 235-253.
Mercer N., 1995: The Guided Construction of Knowledge: Talk Amongst Teachers and Learners,
Multilingual Matters, Clevedon.
85
86
The Earth, Our House is a CLIL module for 9-11-year-olds who learn about
environmental issues through reading, discussions, art work and technology-related
activities.
The course has been given successfully in at least two schools by two different
teachers in Romania.
AECLIL partner
Topic
Eco-pirates
Recycling
Subject area
Environmental education
Language
English
Language Level
B1 or above
Target group
9-11-year-olds
Time
Aims
Products/outcomes
Classroom activities
87
Assessment tools
worksheets
questionnaires
individual scorecards of progress
group portfolios
Assessment criteria
Content
Language
Cooperative work
questionnaires
images of recyclable items
ppt presentation including eco-pirates map and story
visuals displaying topic-related vocabulary
photos, albums
dictionary
worksheets
maps
cardboard, paper
markers, crayons, watercolours
glue
computer, printer, internet
scissors, yarn, needles
coins, buttons
Resources
ACTIVITIES
Lesson 1
Students work
Preparatory activity: Class divided into groups of four. Teams stay together
throughout activities.
Each student is given a questionnaire to collect answers from parents, siblings,
grandparents, neighbours, etc. (at least from five people from at least two different
families). Students ask the questions in Romanian.
88
Resources
- worksheet 1: Initial questionnaire.
Assessment
- filled-in questionnaire.
Lesson 2
Students work
Each student uses the filled-in questionnaires, including their own answers. They
work in groups to centralise data and draw graphic representation of information
collected. Students name objects made of materials that can be recycled.
Resources
- worksheet 1: Initial questionnaire;
- sample graphics;
- images of objects made from
recyclable materials.
Assessment
- direct observation of group work;
- items included in the portfolio.
Lesson 3
Students work
Students learn basic words and expressions in a Jigsaw setting (home groups alternate
with expert groups).
Each student receives a list of all the words they have learned. Students colour the
words learned in the expert group. Experts teach home group members the new words.
Group work: students in groups answer questions written individually on a poster.
Posters are displayed on the wall. Groups rotate clockwise and answer question after
having read the answers of previous groups. In the end, students discuss and rank all the
answers, noting with 1 the most interesting or appropriate response, 2 the next most
interesting, and so on.
Resources
- worksheet 2: Task for expert groups;
- Questions individually written on a
poster and pinned to the wall.
Assessment
- direct observation of task
performance;
- quality of answers and explanation for
ranking answers.
Lesson 4
Students work
The students fill in the worksheet with names of things that can be recycled in each
container. They cut out the images of these things and glue them according to the
containers: plastic, cans, glass, textiles, aluminium. They label every image with the name
of the item shown. Products are displayed. Groups rotate to look at each product and
89
analyse the others work. They add new information to the posters or put a question
mark if something is not clear or incorrect. Groups rotate until they get back to their
poster. They analyse the additions and the questions, offering their responses to the
entire class.
Each student writes down words from Recycle Vocabulary and memorizes them.
Then each student corrects and counts the words they have written. Then they fill in the
matrix in worksheet 9, Table 1, Line 1.
Resources
- worksheet 3: Instruction for teachers;
- images;
- scissors;
- glue, pens/markers;
- worksheet 9: Self-evaluation.
Assessment
- direct observation of task performance
using the grid:
- self- and peer assessment.
Lesson 5
Students work
Each student writes in his/her notebook words from the Recycle Vocabulary and
memorizes them. They will monitor their progress using worksheet 9.
Each student reads his/her words to his/her desk mate. With the desk mates help,
each student corrects and counts the words they have written. They fill in line 2 in table
1, worksheet 9, and reflect on progress.
Each student makes up at least one sentence in L2 using the words written and/or
mentioned by classmates. Group feedback and correction.
Students receive worksheet 4 and stick the correct eco-label above each picture.
Then they write suggestions for how to save energy. Each student finds a pair to read to
them what they have written.
Resources
- worksheet 9: Self-evaluation;
- worksheet 4: Task and materials;
- markers.
Assessment
- self- and peer assessment;
- direct observation of task
performance and analysis of products
using grid.
Lesson 6
Students work
Students read The Story of the Eco-Pirates. Within the groups, students monitor and if
necessary correct each others pronunciation.
Students discuss the story. Taking turns, they ask each other quiz questions.
Students draw on the map the itinerary of the Eco-Pirates trip and find out where
the eco-treasure is buried. Pairs share their work.
90
Resources
- worksheet 5: The Story of the Eco-Pirates;
- worksheet 6: Map.
Assessment
- direct observation of task
performance using the grid.
Lesson 7
Students work
Students watch the projection of the Eco-Pirates story. They receive the written text
of the story with some words missing.
They fill in the gaps while watching the presentation. Then they check and share.
Students draw their Eco-Paradise, in which they include their favourite sports, their ecofriends, their magic flowers, and their favourite fruit. In groups of four, the students
share their work.
Resources
- video presentation;
- worksheet 7: Fill in the gaps;
- paper, crayons, water colours, glue,
scissors, etc.
Assessment
- direct observation of task
performance and analysis of
products using grid.
Lesson 8
Students work
Pair work: each student writes as many words and sentences from the Recycle
Vocabulary as he or she can remember. Each student reads what his or her desk-mate
has written.
Together they correct and count words and sentences to fill in the tables in
worksheet 9.
Students reflect on their progress.
In pairs, students continue the Eco-Pirates story or create a new one in which they
use at least 15 words and phrases from the Recycle Vocabulary. They may use dialogue.
They highlight in the text specific words related to recycling. Pairs share and classmates
give feedback.
Resources
- worksheet 9: Self-evaluation;
- computer, internet;
- dictionary;
- albums.
Assessment
- peer and self-assessment;
- direct observation of task
performance and product analysis
using the grid.
91
Lesson 9
Students work
In groups, students make a poster for an environmental campaign. They use
information found on best practices of other countries about materials that can be
recycled and methods of recycling, where and how energy can be saved, how we
contribute to the ecological balance, etc.
Students prepare an exhibition.
At home, students are asked to repeat the survey. Students ask their parents, siblings,
grandparents, neighbours, etc.; at least five people from at least two different families.
Resources
- cardboard, paper, markers, glue,
crayons, water-colours;
- photos, printer, computer, internet;
- dictionary, albums, scissors, etc.
Assessment
- direct observation of task
performance and product analysis
using the grid.
Lesson 10
Students work
Students visit the poster exhibition. Groups analyse the posters. They ask questions
and express opinions.
Students fill in the questionnaire by themselves.
They use the questionnaire in English. They centralize the data and prepare the
graphic representation. Students assess the progress by comparing the results to those of
the initial questionnaire. They discuss findings and express opinions.
Resources
- notepad, sticky notes;
- worksheet 8: Final questionnaire.
Assessment
- portfolio, including filled in
questionnaires;
- peer evaluation;
- direct observation and product
analysis using the grid.
Lesson 11
Students work
Students make a list of actions that could be achieved in the group they live in (class,
family) to help the ecological balance. Students discuss and rank answers.
Students write as many words and sentences from the Recycle Vocabulary as they
can remember. Self- and peer correction: each student reads words written by his deskmate. Then they fill in the tables in worksheet 9 with the number of correct words and
sentences. Students analyse and assess progress.
92
Resources
- flipchart sheets, sticky notes, markers;
- worksheet 10: Analytic assessment grid for
content, language and cooperative work (see
previous pages).
Assessment
- direct observation of task;
- performance;
- portfolio analysis;
- self- and peer assessment.
4
good
3
satisfactory
2
almost
satisfactory
1
unsatisfactory
Use of words
learned about
recovery,
recycling and
reuse in
simple
sentences
Student uses
all new words
correctly and
appropriately
in simple
sentences.
Student uses
at least 15
new words
correctly and
appropriately
in simple
sentences.
Student uses
at least 10
new words
correctly and
appropriately
in simple
sentences.
Student uses at
least 5 new
words in simple
sentences.
Students uses
less than 5 new
words in simple
sentences.
Identification
of relevant
information
from various
sources of
information
Student
identifies
relevant
information
from at least
four sources of
at least three
different types.
Student
identifies
relevant
information
from at least
three
sources of at
least two
different
types.
Student
identifies
relevant
information
from at least
two sources
(possibly of
the same
type).
Student
identifies
relevant
information from
at least one
source.
Student does
not identify
relevant
information
from any
source.
Originality in
preparation
and
execution of
visual
materials
(drawings,
symbols,
images,
photos), to
raise
awareness of
ecological
life-view
Student has at
least 3 original
ideas in
designing and
preparing
visual
materials
(drawings,
symbols,
pictures,
photos) to
raise
awareness of
recycling.
Student has
at least 2
original ideas
in designing
and
preparing
visual
materials
(drawings,
symbols,
pictures,
photos) to
raise
awareness of
recycling.
Student has
at least one
original idea
in designing
and
preparing
visual
materials
(drawings,
symbols,
pictures,
photos) to
raise
awareness of
recycling.
Student has
some
contribution to
designing and
preparing
original visual
materials
(drawings,
symbols,
pictures, photos)
to raise
awareness of
recycling.
Student has no
contribution to
designing and
preparing
original visuals
materials
(drawings,
symbols,
pictures,
photos) to raise
awareness of
recycling.
CREATIVITY
CONTENT
Criteria
93
Score
5
excellent
4
good
3
satisfactory
2
almost
satisfactory
Ability to
assess own
progress
Student
completes in a
graph the
number of
words and
phrases
learned in four
exercises.
Student
completes in
a graph the
number of
words and
phrases
learned in at
least three
exercises.
Student
completes in
a graph the
number of
words and
phrases
learned at
least two
exercises.
Student
completes in a
graph the
number of words
and phrases
learned in at
least one
exercise.
Student never
records the
number of
words and
phrases
learned.
Use of
language
Speaking: To
seek dialogue
Student
responds very
well orally to
messages
related to
recycling.
Student
responds
well orally to
messages
related to
recycling.
Student
responds
orally in a
satisfactory
manner to
messages
related to
recycling.
With the
teachers or
peers help,
student
responds orally
to messages.
Student does
not respond to
oral messages
at all.
Use of
language
Listening:
Understandin
g of oral
directions
related to the
recovery,
recycling,
reuse
Student
responds
promptly to all
oral directions
in L2.
Student
responds
promptly to
most oral
directions in
L2.
Student
responds to
most oral
directions in
L2 after they
have been
repeated.
Student
responds to
some oral
directions in L2
after they have
been repeated.
Student never
responds to
oral directions
in L2.
Use of
language
Reading:
Reading
aloud a
familiar text in
L2
Student
always reads
familiar text in
L2 correctly.
Student
reads familiar
text correctly
in L2 most of
the time.
Student
reads at least
three
sentences
correctly in
L2 without
help.
Student reads at
least three
sentences
correctly with
little help from
teacher or
peers.
Student reads
fewer than
three
sentences
correctly
despite
significant help
from teacher or
peers.
Use of
language
Writing
Student writes
original
sentences
correctly and
makes minor
mistakes when
using
unfamiliar
structures or
words.
Student
writes
original
sentences
with some
minor
mistakes, but
does not
attempt to
use
unfamiliar
structures.
Student
writes
sentences
with mistakes
in familiar
structures or
words, and
does not
attempt to
use
unfamiliar
structures.
Student writes
incomplete or
incomprehensibl
e sentences.
Student writes
incomplete or
incomprehensib
le words.
EVALUATION
Criteria
LANGUAGE
94
1
unsatisfactory
Score
COOPERATIVE WORK
Ability to
cooperate in
carrying out
group tasks
Student
performs very
well as a
group member
all the time,
demonstrating
initiative,
organization
skills and
continuous
encourageme
nt of all group
members to
engage in the
activity.
Student
performs well
as a group
member
most of the
time,
demonstratin
g initiative
and support
for other
members.
Student
sometimes
performs well
as a group
member,
demonstratin
g some
initiative and
support for
other
members.
At least once,
the student has
initiative or
offers support
for other
members.
Student does
not perform
well as a group
member at any
time.
95
96
LE CREDIT
Mariana Tsonkova
Sujet/thme
Domaine
conomie/Banques
Langue
Franais
Niveau de langue
A2+
Groupe cibl
Classe de dixime
Dure
12 heures
Objectifs
Contenu :
dcrire le mcanisme gnral du crdit
expliquer tous les sens du crdit
apprendre limportance du crdit
connatre les formes du crdit
faire lanalyse du crdit commercial
connatre le mcanisme du TI (taux dintrt)
apprendre la formule du TI
comprendre les thories sur le TI
expliquer les TI les plus courants
connatre les facteurs dinfluence.
Langue :
- apprendre des expressions avec le mot crdit
- apprendre un lexique spcialis
Comptences sociales :
- pouvoir communiquer au guichet
-
Products/outcomes
97
Activits en classe
prsentation
explication
lecture de documents en ligne et sur papier
formulation de dfinitions
questionnaire
multimdia
travail en couples et en groupes
recherche de sites internet
rdaction dun questionnaire et dune enqute
laboration dun diaporama
composition de questions
Moyens dvaluation
observation directe
test
auto-valuation
questionnaire.
Critres dvaluation
Contenu
Langue
Travail en quipe
Ressources
ACTIVITS
Activits du professeur avant les cours :
-
choix des manuels et des ressources via internet : sites, dictionnaires etc. ;
recherche et slection des documents/dpliants de publicit bancaires en franais et en
bulgare .
98
99
Test
Le test consiste en 9 exercices diffrents qui ont pour but dvaluer les connaissances
thoriques des lves sur le crdit rpondre des questions choix multiple, trouver le
terme partir dune dfinition, complter les mots manquants, complter une grille.
Chaque exercice comporte des points qui donnent la note totale.
Holistic rubric
Scores
Descriptors
1
Unsatisfactory
2
Almost satisfactory
3
Satisfactory
100
Number of
students
4
Good
5
Excellent
RFLEXIONS ET COMMENTAIRES
Je voudrais partager mon exprience avec dautres professeurs pour quils nhsitent
pas exploiter la mthodologie CLIL/EMILE. Grce elle, jai pu faire avancer
presque tous les lves. De plus, les connaissances acquises en harmonisant discipline et
langue auront un impact positif sur la formation professionnelle des jeunes banquiers
dont certains seraient concurrentiels sur le march europen du travail. Leur
participation au travail avec les modules les a motivs poser candidature pour un stage
Lonardo da Vinci dans des banques en France. Deux autres ont t effectus en 2005
et en 2008 dans des banques Marseille. Un projet Lonardo da Vinci a t dpos au
mois de fvrier 2012.
Dans le CD on trouve
- les possibles solutions des travaux faits par les lves
- le test sur le crdit
- la grille holistique dvaluation
- un questionnaire pour le diaporama fait par les lves
- le diaporama fait par les lves
- le diaporama Les taux dintrt simples et les taux dintrt composs fait pour une leon de
mathmatiques.
101
Topic
Redox reactions
Subject area
Chemistry
Language
English
Language Level
A2 and above
Target group
Time
12 hours
Aims
Products/outcomes
Classroom activities
teachers speech
power point presentation
102
Assessment tools
written report
final written test
laboratory experiment
assessment grid
Assessment criteria
Content
Language
Cooperative work
Resources
ACTIVITIES
Lesson 1
Students work
Students are introduced to the topic thanks to a power point presentation. At first
they are given a sheet containing the key words to understand the content, which
teachers will explain and make clear. After that they are required to take notes directly
from the projected file according to the teachers' further explanations. The file first
provides examples of redox phenomena as observed in real-life situations (e.g.: rust,
decay, corrosion, combustion, biological processes). These examples are also explained
by the help of pictures. There are also play-on-words and pictures to teach the basic
concepts. Reduction and oxidation are then explained in a more technical way through
formulae. Hints for balancing them are also given.
Students listen to the presentation, take notes and interact with teachers by asking
questions when concepts are not clearly understood. Only English will be accepted as
the language of interaction, in order to improve and stimulate the use of vocabulary and
linguistic fluency on the topic.
In the end, students are given a conceptual map to fill in.
Resources
- worksheet 1: Redox Key Words;
- power point file: Redox Reactions;
- worksheet 2: Conceptual Map.
Assessment
- evaluation of conversational skills
through interaction.
103
Lesson 2
Students work
After revising the notes taken, students are asked to fill in a questionnaire with open
answers on the contents in the power point file. Answers are then discussed in class and
further explanation is provided, when required. Interaction with teachers is stimulated
by correcting and self-correcting mistakes both about the content and the language used
in discussion.
Resources
- students notes;
- worksheet 3: Questionnaire.
Assessment
- filled-in questionnaire;
- direct observation of communicative
skills in student-teacher interaction;
- understanding content.
Lesson 3
Students work
Students are given practical examples of redox balancing, which are first explained by
the teacher on the blackboard and with the use of the Periodic Table of Elements.
Note-taking activity is once again stimulated and student-teacher interaction promoted.
In the end students are given a worksheet to practice balancing through a series of
possible reactions to develop by assigning oxidation numbers and balancing reactions.
Resources
- Periodic Table of Elements;
- worksheet 4: Redox Exercises;
- blackboard.
Lesson 4
Students work
Students are shown a video of a laboratory experiment dealing with an example of a
redox reaction. A glossary of the main tools used in a chemistry laboratory activity is
given so as to allow teachers to refer to these tools in English without misunderstanding
on the part of students. Pronunciation is pointed out and practiced. Discussion on the
images shown is promoted in English only.
Resources
- video: Redox Demo;
- worksheet 5: Lab Tools Glossary;
Assessment
- direct observation on listening
comprehension;
- pronunciation appropriateness;
- communicative skills.
104
Lesson 5
Students work
Laboratory reproduction of the experiment previously viewed in the video. Students
are divided into groups chosen by the teachers according to their attitude, basic
knowledge and technical ability in the lab. The experiment is reproduced under the
supervision of the teachers to ensure safe use of materials and the respect of the
procedures.
After that students are asked to write a report in English on their experience and to
work on a brief oral exposition of laboratory work.
Resources
- -Video: Redox Demo;
- Chemistry Lab.
Assessment
- direct observation of group work and
task performance;
- language skills: speaking, writing.
Lesson 6
Students work
A text is provided for reading comprehension activities. Students get information on
a famous example of the practical exploitation of redox reactions in the creation of a
battery. Voltas pile is described and details about its functioning are given. In addition,
students are given materials about Voltas life experience and his knowledge of chemical
processes. Discussion on the topics provided is once more encouraged after the
proposal of a text to evaluate correct comprehension of the materials examined.
Resources
- text: Voltas Pile;
- worksheet 6: Reading Comprehension.
Assessment
- language skill: reading;
- filled-in questionnaire (ref. worksheet
6).
Lesson 7
Students work
At this stage students are asked to complete a final test based on knowledge acquired
both as far as the contents explained are concerned and their practical ability to deal
with chemical reaction balancing.
Resources
- worksheet 7: Final test;
- worksheet 8: Assessment grid (see
below).
Assessment
- evaluation on knowledge acquired and
its application to given situations;
- language skills: reading, writing.
105
Lesson 8
Students work
Corrected papers are redistributed to students and the most common mistakes
underlined and analysed through a checklist on the blackboard. Students are stimulated
to ask questions on individual mistakes, when needed. A final discussion about the
experience is promoted during which students are asked about their impressions of the
whole experience.
Assessment
Resources
- evaluation of conversational skills
- students final tests
through interaction
- blackboard
- worksheet 8: Analytic assessment grid for
content, language and cooperative work (see
below)
Criteria
5
excellent
4
good
3
satisfactory
2
almost
satisfactory
4
unsatisfactory
Use of basic
subject concepts
and
knowledge (what)
Has acquired
all the basic
concepts and
principles of
the topic. Well
structured,
correct and
comprehensiv
e explanation;
excellent
personal
evaluation
Has acquired
most of the
basic concepts
and principles
of the topic.
Generally well
structured,
correct and
adequate
explanation;
good personal
evaluation.
Has acquired
some basic
concepts and
principles of
the topic.
Sufficient
explanation,
with a limited
number of
errors; limited
personal
evaluation.
Has acquired
only a few
basic concepts
and principles
of the topic.
The
explanation
shows major
deficiencies in
terms of
logical
structuring and
formulation.
Hasnt
acquired any
of the basic
concepts and
principles of
the topic. The
explanation is
severely
deficient in
terms of
logical
structuring and
formulation; no
personal
evaluation.
Application of
knowledge to
new situations
(how it relates)
Has used a
few simple
concepts and
applied them
when guided.
Hasnt
achieved any
knowledge.
Creativity /
evaluation
Has shown
critical
thinking,
creativity and
initiative.
Has shown a
good level of
creativity and
evaluation
capability.
Has shown
sufficient
evaluation
capability and
sometimes
original ideas.
Has not
always shown
sufficient
evaluation
ability and has
presented
poor creativity.
Has shown
inability to
evaluate and
very poor
creativity.
CO N T E N T
CO N T E N T
106
Score
LANGUAGE
Criteria
5
excellent
4
good
3
satisfactory
2
almost
satisfactory
4
unsatisfactory
Use of language:
Consistent
grammatical
control and
appropriate
use of
vocabulary.
Can express
him/herself
with a natural
flow and
interact with
ease.
Good
grammatical
control and
generally
appropriate
use of
vocabulary.
Can express
him/herself
and interact
with a good
degree of
fluency.
A few
mistakes in
grammar and
vocabulary
use do not
lead to
misunderstand
ing. Can
express
him/herself
and interact
with a
reasonable
degree of
fluency.
Systematically
makes
mistakes in
grammar and
vocabulary
use but the
message is
generally
clear. Can
manage the
discourse and
the interaction
with effort and
must be
helped.
Systematic
grammar
mistakes and
the narrow
range of
vocabulary
makes the
message
meaningless.
Communicatio
n is totally
dependent on
repetition,
rephrasing and
repair.
Original and
creative.
Good level of
interaction.
Sufficient
degree of
interaction.
Partial
cooperation.
Unable to work
in group.
listening
speaking
reading
writing
interaction
Cooperative work
Score
REFERENCES
Crippa M., Nepgen D., 2010: Al centro della chimica, Le Monnier Scuola.
Brady J.E., Holum J.R., 1992: Chimica, Zanichelli.
Alessandro Volta (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alessandro_Volta).
Chemguide (http://www.chemguide.co.uk/inorganic/redox/definitions.html)
Collection of resources created by Peggy Lawson, a classroom teacher from Oxbow Prairie
Heights School, Souris Moose Mountain School Division No. 122 (now the South
East Cornerstone School Division No. 209)
107
(http://www.saskschools.ca/curr_content/chem30_05/6_redox/redox1_1.htm).
GSC Chemistry Notes
(http://www.files.chem.vt.edu/RVGS/ACT/notes/oxidation_numbers.html).
Science clarified
(http://www.scienceclarified.com/Oi-Ph/Oxidation-Reduction-Reaction.html)
ScienceGeek.net
(http://www.sciencegeek.net/APchemistry/Presentations/4_Redox/index.html)
Redox (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redox).
Redox Demo (video, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zg-gsLEGk2A&feature=fvst).
108
Das folgende CLIL-Modul ist nach einer Verhandlung mit den Schlern und
Schlerinnen und mit der Fachkraft entstanden. Themen und Methodik wurden
besprochen und von ihnen akzeptiert. Bei der Modulplanung hat man vor allem die
Auswahl der Materialien bercksichtigt: die authentischen multimedialen Materialien
haben das Verstehen erleichtert und vor allem die Lernenden motiviert.
Meinungsuerung und -austausch sowie die Entwicklung von strategischen
Kompetenzen sind ein Leit-Motiv in jeder Unterrichtsstunde gewesen. Die Lernenden
haben selbst das Endprodukt vorgeschlagen. Die Entscheidungen in Bezug auf Inhalt,
Struktur und Rollenverteilung wurden von den Lernenden selbst getroffen
(lernerzentrierter Unterricht). Der Schwerpunkt des Moduls war schlielich die
Evaluation und insbesondere die Frderung der Selbstevaluation, die man durch
Klassengesprche,
individuelle
Gesprche,
Fragebgen,
Tagebcher
und
Bewertungsraster durchgefhrt hat.
Partner(s)
Thema
Fach
Wirtschaftsgeographie
Sprache
Deutsch
Sprachniveau
Zielgruppe
Zeit
12 Unterrichtsstunden
109
Lernziele
Sprachkompetenz:
-
Definitionen bearbeiten
Endprodukt
Unterrichtsmethode
Evaluation
Frontalunterricht
Unterrichtsgesprche
kooperatives Lernen
Einzel-, Paar- und Gruppenarbeit
Formative Bewertung durch
Beobachtung, wie die Lernenden ihr Wissen aufbauen
Beobachtung der Verwendung der Fremdsprache bzw. der
Muttersprache
- Beobachtung der Selbstndigkeit der Lernenden
- Feedback-Fragen seitens der Lehrperson und Beobachtung
der Qualitt der Antworten
- Beobachtung der Fhigkeit der einzelnen Lernenden, der
-
110
Arbeitsmaterialien
Sprachgebrauch:
Verstndlichkeit
Kohrenz
Flssigkeit des Sprechens
kommunikative Angemessenheit
Initiative in der Interaktion
Korrektheit (Aussprache, Wortschatz und Grammatik)
Angemessene Benutzung der Fachtermini
Fachinhalt:
Informationen
Prgnanz der angefhrten Begrndungen
Glaubwrdigkeit der Rolle im Diskussionsforum
AKTIVITTEN
Schritt 1: Aspekte der Nachhaltigkeit
Unterrichtsgestaltung
Die Fachlexik der Arbeitsbltter wird vorentlastet. Die Schler und Schlerinnen
steigen in das Thema ein, indem sie in Partnerarbeit und im nachfolgenden
Klassengesprch Aspekte der Nachhaltigkeit mit Hilfe eines Arbeitsblattes untersuchen.
111
Arbeitsmaterialien
- Arbeitsblatt 1: ber den Begriff
Nachhaltigkeit
- Individuelles Lerntagebuch
Evaluation
- Feedback-Fragen seitens der Lehrkraft
Angemessenheit der Antworten
- Reflexion ber den Lernprozess
anhand des individuellen
Lerntagebuches
Evaluation
- Vergewisserung des Verstehens des
Films durch Feedback-Fragen und
Ergnzung des Arbeitsblattes
- Beobachtung der Verwendung der
Fremdsprache bzw. der Muttersprache
beim Antworten der Leitfragen der
Lehrkraft
112
Evaluation
- Kontrolle, ob sowohl die Definitionen
als auch die Schemata und
Zeichnungen verstanden worden sind
(AB 5-6)
- Beobachtung der Fhigkeit der
Lernenden, den Inhalt zu
reproduzieren und den anderen ihr
Wissen mitzuteilen
- Kontrolle der Stichwrter (AB 5)
- Reflexion ber den Lernprozess
anhand des individuellen
Lerntagebuches
Evaluation
- Feedback-Fragen und Ergnzung des
Arbeitsblattes zur Vergewisserung,
dass der Film verstanden worden ist
- Beobachtung, wie die Fremdsprache
bzw. die Muttersprache beim
Antworten der Leitfragen der
Lehrkraft verwendet wird
113
Arbeitsmaterialien
- Arbeitsblatt 8: Die Energiekosten
Evaluation
- Kontrolle, ob die in der Tabelle (AB
8) enthaltenen Daten ber die
einzelnen Energieformen (AB 5-6)
verstanden worden sind
- Beobachtung der Fhigkeit der
Lernenden, die Statistik zu
interpretieren und anderen
Informationen mitzuteilen
Schritt 7: Klassenarbeit
Unterrichtsgestaltung
Diese Unterrichtsstunde wird der Kontrolle des Gelernten gewidmet. Mit
geschlossenen Aufgaben (Multiple Choice-Aufgabe, Lckentext) wird kontrolliert, wie
sich die Lernenden den Inhalt eingeprgt haben. Zwei offene Fragen erlauben, auch die
Schreibkompetenz zu bewerten.
Arbeitsmaterialien
- Test (Geschlossene Aufgaben und
offene Fragen)
Evaluation
- Summative Leistungsbewertung und
Lernzielkontrolle
Evaluation
- Selbstevaluation und Reflexion ber
das integrierte Bewertungsverfahren
114
Arbeitsmaterialien
- Individuelle Lerntagebcher
- Lerntagebcher der Gruppen;
- Bogen zur Beobachtung der Arbeitsgruppe
Evaluation
- Durch eine realittsnahe Aufgabe
beobachtet die Lehrperson, wie die
Lernenden das inhaltliche und
fremdsprachliche Knnen integrieren
und aufbauen
- Durch Tagebcher und
Beobachtungsbgen werden sich die
Lernenden ihres Lernprozesses und
der erworbenen Sozialkompetenzen
bewusst
Evaluation
- Kritische Analyse des Produktes
anhand der Beobachtungsbgen
Diskussionsforum
- Gesamte Reflexion ber die
Schlerleistungen und ber die
Strken und Schwchen des
Projektes
115
Beobachtungsbogen Diskussionsforum
Bewertung der Teilnahme der einzelnen Schler am Diskussionsforum
Sprachgebrauch
- Verstndlichkeit
- Interaktion
- Initiative
- Flssigkeit des Sprechens
- Lexik
- Ausdrucksweise
- Korrektheit der Sprache
Inhalt
- Sinnhaftigkeit
- Glaubwrdigkeit der Rolle
- Informationen
116
NUTRITION
Inese Barkovska
The module gives a sample of the learning of the topic Nutrition in three stages.
The theme is studied in forms 10, 11 and 12. To give a better idea how it works we
present the parts of the teachers individual program. As the subject Science in
English is an integral part of the secondary syllabus for the students (Daugavpils State
gymnasia) who study mathematics, science and technical programs it is compulsory in
their timetable it was necessary to work out a program. This means that there are 35
lessons allotted for the subject per academic year.
The teachers individual program is based on the Latvia National syllabus for the
integrated subject science (in their native tongue) and the standard of acquiring the
English language. The relevant topics (Nutrition, Digestive system, Health) are
studied in the relevant subjects over a three-year period.
CONTENT: PROGRAM
The topic Nutrition is studied through the program, each time focusing on different
aspects and referring to previous knowledge. To understand how it works we have
provided extracts of the teachers program. The topic under discussion is given in italics.
FORM 10 (2nd semester)
Learning
component
The diversity and
unity of the world
Compulsory content
Life processes in
organisms
Topics
Cells Types of cells
Nutrition
Nutrients
Reproduction
Number of
lessons
2
2
2
2
Compulsory content
Systems, their
operation and
interaction
Topics
Human organ systems
Blood circulation
Digestive system
(etc.)
117
Number of
lessons
2
2
2
Compulsory content
Topics
Human ecology
Health Healthy lifestyle
Problems with health
Number of
lessons
1
4
2
AECLIL Partner
Topic
Nutrition
Subject area
Science
Language
English
Language Level
Target group
Time
Aims
Products/outcomes
Presentations, essays
Classroom activities
Assessment tools
Assessment criteria
Content
Language
Cooperative work
Resources
FORM 10
Topic:
Time:
Aims:
118
ACTIVITIES
Lesson 1
Students work
Group work: What do plants/humans need to stay alive?
- Students are divided into 2 big groups (plant and human ones) and a few small
ones.
- Talk: discussion. Students take their own notes, edit their group work.
- Reading in pairs. Find out the missing words (A teacher removes 5-6 words from
the text Human as Organisms Nutrition, for example: cereals, growth, store,
keep, minerals, fit, reactions, etc.).
- Discussion: The differences and similarities in plant and human nutrition. Problem
question: Find similarities and differences in plant and human nutrition!
- Creative task (individually): Describe your breakfast from the point of view of
nutrients.
- Home assignment: Be ready to speak about What makes a good breakfast/
lunch/dinner/supper? Why do we need to have breakfast?
Resources and materials
- paper
- Humans as Organisms and Green Plants as Organisms, taken from Key Stage three science, p.
8 and 21 (step 3 and 4). The material can be used as a hand-out, as a language task
(to insert words which had been previously removed from the text), etc.
- Internet resources: www.britishcouncil.org/science-cubed (step 6).s
Students work
- Presentation prepared by students.
- Presenters questions to the audience about their presentation (feedback).
- Students questions to the presenters.
- Expansion/home assignment: Regional diets. Food consumed in different regions
of the world.
Assessment
- peer evaluation: discussing positive aspects and shortcomings.
- assessment of oral performance (presentation).
Resources and materials
- Assessment grid for oral presentation (example, see below).
FORM 11
Topic:
Time:
Aims:
Digestive system
2 lessons of 40 minutes each.
- to revise the previous knowledge about human organs;
- introduce English terms and be able to describe the processes;
119
120
Aims:
Lesson 1
Students work
1. Pair work: Organize graphically your ideas about healthy lifestyle and be ready to
present them to your peers.
2. Evaluation and discussion of the ideas presented.
3. Presentation (The procedure similar to that in forms 10-11, lesson 2).
4. Revision about nutrition and digestion.
5. Discussion: Diets and dieting pros and cons.
Students first work in groups and then present their arguments.
6. Factors which affect human health. Brainstorming by the whole class; teacher
monitors and writes down the ideas.
Assessment
- peer evaluation: discussing positive aspects and shortcomings.
- assessment of oral performance (presentation).
Resources and materials
- paper;
- hand-out: Language Tasks (information gap-filling, matching words and definitions,
matching parts of sentences);
- Key Stage Science, p. 18 (step 6);
- Assessment grid for oral presentation (see below).
Lesson 2
Students work
7. Argumentative essay writing. Pre-writing activities (Brainstorming ideas, planning,
organizing ideas, etc.).
8. Tasks on revising vocabulary.
Lesson 3
Students work
9. Test on the topic Healthy lifestyle, diets.
Assessment
- Assessment for written essay.
Resources and materials
- Assessment grid for essays (see below);
- test on health (two variants).
121
ASSESSEMENT GRIDS
Assessment grid for oral presentation (example)
Scores
Accuracy
Descriptors
Students performance is just reading
the text with pronunciation mistakes
which disturb understanding of the
presentation.
2
satisfactory
3
good
4
excellent
122
Content
Language
Points
good
10-12
satisfactory
5-9
CO N T E N T
Criteria
Use of basic
subject
concepts
and
knowledge
5
excellent
Content
completely
relevant to the
topic. Arguments
supplied with
examples. Facts
justified with
appropriate
examples.
Appropriately
used all/main
basic concepts.
Evidence of
understanding
principles of the
topic.
4
good
Topic discussed
successfully. One
argument can
lack support.
123
2-3
1
satisfactory
unsatisfactory
An attempt to
The topic is not
discuss the topic revealed or is
has been made. misunderstood.
Does not give
enough
arguments or
aspects of the
problem.
LANGUAGE
5
Criteria
excellent
Organisation Clearly and
logically
arranged. Linkers
are varied and
used successfully.
Proportions
observed.
4
good
Clear layout. Link
words used,
though some
may be repeated.
2-3
1
satisfactory
unsatisfactory
It is possible to Organisation is
follow the ideas. hard to follow or
trace. Too short.
Paragraphing
may be wrong or
absent.
Proportions are
not observed.
Too long or
short. (The
normal number
of words +/10%.)
Vocabulary Vocabulary is
and spelling relevant to the
topic. A wide
repertoire of
vocabulary and
terms. No
spelling mistakes.
Appropriate use
of topic
vocabulary.
Inappropriate use
of synonyms may
occurr. A few
spelling mistakes
(1-3).
Basic vocabulary
is used.
Vocabulary
repertoire is
limited. There are
mistakes in using
synonyms.
Grammar
Good grammar.
Some mistakes
(1-3) may be
present.
There are
Mistakes prevent
mistakes (5 -10) understanding of
content.
in structures,
prepositions and
verb forms.
Some mistakes
(1-2) are
disturbing.
No grammar
mistakes, except
for some (1-2) in
articles.
Inappropriate use
of basic
vocabulary.
Sometimes (3 or
more cases)
spelling inhibits
understanding.
124
10 2 students
9 3 students
8 7 students
7 2 students
6 4 students
5 3 students
4 1 students
The results show that the test functions well in discriminating among students. They
coincide with students performance in other subjects and show rather high levels of
acquiring the material revised and learned, which proves that the module works well.
Problems
1.
2.
3.
While working on the method of testing it was difficult to choose the most
appropriate. So we came to the variant of a complex work which includes both testtype and a substantial piece of written work. That is why we used two assessment
grids as models, the Assessment grid for oral presentation and the Evaluation grid for essays
created by the teacher herself.
In fact, regarding the assessment, almost each written piece requires the creation of a
grid for assessment, which depends on aim and length. And, in our opinion, accuracy
does not have to play the main role.
Students could consider things which are to be evaluated in CLIL and discuss
together with a teacher whether or not a certain grid suits them if we want to
implement a student-centered module.
125
126
127
The module is prepared with the aim of facilitating the learning of concepts about
kinetic energy and using English through activities focused on concepts by using CLIL
methods. It contains assessment criteria grids for language, content and cooperative
work, activity description grids, preparatory and warm-up activities and exercises.
AECLIL partner
Topic
Subject area
Physics
Language
English
Language Level
B1
Target group
Time
Five hours
Aims
Outcomes
128
Classroom activities
lecturers talk
group work
Assessment tools
exam
direct observation
Assessment criteria
Content
Language
Cooperative work
Resources
course textbook:
Fundamentals of Physics, by Halliday, Resnick, Walker,
8th (extended) edition, ISBN 978-0-471-75801-3.
blackboard
transparencies, overhead projector
reading passage related to work, energy and power (taken from
How Things Work, The Physics of Everyday Life, by Louis A.
Bloomfield, 2nd edition, The University of Virginia)
the video of the lecture entitled Work, Energy, and Universal
Gravitation and its transcript Walter Lewin, 8.01 Physics I:
Classical Mechanics, Fall 1999, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology: MIT OpenCourseWare, http://ocw.mit.edu
(accessed 03.09.2012)
worksheets
scratch paper
ACTIVITIES
Step 1
Students work
Warm-up (paper airplane): The students are given some scratch paper to make an
airplane and are asked to throw it as far as possible. They are then asked to answer the
question: Who has spent the maximum energy and how do you know that?.
Resources
- scratch paper.
Assessment
The expected answer to the question is: Whichever plane is thrown the farthest
requires the hardest work; thus, whoever has thrown it the farthest has worked the
hardest. This is the result of the work and kinetic energy theorem.
129
Step 2
Students work
In worksheet 1 (Work, energy and power) a reading passage related to work, energy and
power is distributed to the students. In worksheet 2 (Language Strategies) the instructor
pre-teaches some common strategies for guessing the meaning of words in context.
While reading the text the students are asked to underline the given contextual clues
and to guess the meanings of the words by using them. To check their understanding
they are asked some follow up questions like: How many names can you list for
disordered energy?
Resources
- worksheet 1: Work, energy and power (taken from Louis A. Bloomfield, How
Things Work, The Physics of Everyday Life);
- worksheet 2: Language Strategies.
Alteration: This could be done orally by eliciting the word-guessing strategies from the
students. After that, the teacher goes through the word-guessing strategies and writes
them on the board. The students are then given the text to work on the definitions of
words and the contextual clues and to do the exercises.
Follow-up: The students are given another text to study the contextual clues as
homework.
Assessment
Whoever finds the contextual clues could answer the questions correctly.
Step 3
Students work
The task is to watch a video (worksheet 3).
Pre-listening: The teacher draws attention to the topic by asking a volunteer to stand
up and stand still for a while. The teacher then asks the student and the whole class
whether or not s/he would feel tired if s/he kept the same position for a long time; the
answer is yes. Eventually, the teacher asks if there is any difference between tiredness
and work and what the definition in physics is of work; the answer is: In physics you
can get tired without having done any work.
While listening: The students are asked to watch the video extract taken from a lecture
on work and energy by paying special attention to certain terms in physics and their
definitions and taking notes.
When the students finish listening they are asked some questions on the purpose of
the activity, why they have listened to a video extract instead of merely listening to an
audio cassette, and the problems they faced while doing the listening in L2, etc.
Post-listening: After the students listen, they are given worksheet 4 to do the exercise.
130
Resources
- overhead display;
the video of the lecture entitled Work and Energy and its transcript Walter Lewin,
8.01 Physics I: Classical Mechanics, Fall 1999, http://ocw.mit.edu
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PmJV8CHIqFc&list=PLF688ECB2FF119649
- worksheet 3: Keywords and their Turkish equivalents;
- worksheet 4: Listening and note-taking;
- worksheet 5: Assessment grids (see below).
Assessment
Those who supply the correct answers are the ones who have taken notes properly.
ASSESSMENT GRIDS
Assessment grid for content
Scores
Descriptors
1
Unsatisfactory
2
Almost satisfactory
3
Satisfactory
4
Good
5
Excellent
Descriptors
1
Unsatisfactory
Student doesnt use the everyday English and the specific vocabulary on
the subject matter at all.
2
Almost satisfactory
Student is able to use the everyday English and the specific vocabulary
on the subject matter improperly.
3
Satisfactory
Student is almost able to use the everyday English and the specific
vocabulary on the subject matter.
4
Good
Student is able to use the everyday English and the specific vocabulary
on the subject matter properly.
5
Excellent
Student is able to use the everyday English and the specific vocabulary
on the subject matter perfectly.
131
Descriptors
1
Unsatisfactory
2
Almost
satisfactory
3
Satisfactory
4
Good
5
Excellent
132
133
Learning CLIL through CLIL is a CLIL module for teachers and teacher trainers, i.e.,
higher education. The module thus follows an appropriate structure for the students it is
aimed at. The course has been delivered successfully in five different institutions
(Teacher Training courses organized by schools, Teacher Training courses organized by
Teachers Associations, Courses organized at University) by three different teachers in
Spain.
AECLIL partner
Topic
Subject area
Methodology teaching
Language
English
Language Level
B2 or above
Target group
Time
Aims
Products/outcomes
Classroom activities
134
Assessment tools
observation sheets
self & peer assessment sheets
task production
rubrics
Assessment criteria:
Content
Language
Cooperative work
Resources
PPT presentations
videoclips Content & Language integrated learning. From CLIL
methods for language learning
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4YoCQYJezNA&feature=
mfu_in_order&playnext=1&videos=hn4zF7x3fyc
Cooperative learning (video)
http:// www.youtube.com/watch?v=HEh8Z0sbiRE
article: Moate J., 2010: The integrated nature of CLIL: A
Sociocultural Perspective, in International CLIL Research
Journal, vol. 1 (3) / 2010
worksheets
assessment rubrics
computer
Internet
ACTIVITIES
Lesson 1 Activity 1
Students work
Warm-up activity: watching first segment of video (whole group). Discussion and
reflection on:
- how they learn languages;
- different methods used;
- effectiveness of methods used;
- difference between learning by construction and learning by instruction.
Resources
- PPT Unit 1: Learning CLIL through
CLIL;
- video 1: Content & Language integrated
learning. From CLIL methods for
language learning (First segment 0:001:34).
Assessment
- observation of group discussion;
- understand difference between
learning by construction and
learning by instruction.
135
Lesson 1 Activity 2
Students work
Follow-up activity: second segment of video. Discussion and reflection on:
- new information society;
- need to rethink how we teach and what we teach;
- CLIL definition.
Resources
- PPT Unit 1;
- video 1: Content & Language integrated
learning. From CLIL methods for
language learning (Second segment
1:34-2:39).
Assessment
- observation of group discussion;
- CLIL definition.
Lesson 1 Activity 3
Students work
Identification and organisation of knowledge:
- methods;
- advantages & disadvantages;
- effectiveness;
- conclusions.
Resources
- PPT Unit 1.
Assessment
- observation of group discussion;
- advantages, disadvantages & - conclusion.
Lesson 1 Activity 4
Students work
Language identification:
- learning vs. teaching;
- communicative vs. grammatical competence;
- approach vs. method;
- competence building;
- knowledge development;
- thinking & re-thinking.
Resources
- PPT Unit 1.
Assessment
- self and peer assessment.
136
Lesson 1 Activity 5
Students work
Task for students:
After having watched the videos and the PowerPoint presentation on CLIL methods
for language learning, the students do the following in groups:
a. Write a list of the most important concepts learned so far;
b. Classify and distribute those concepts/areas of knowledge among the group
members;
c. Find out information on the Internet about those concepts and anything new related
to them. Make a summary of their most important notions;
d. Organize the new contents and display them graphically in a one-slide PowerPoint
presentation taking into consideration fixed guidelines (see worksheet 1);
e. Produce a feedback survey about your poster for classmates to fill in during
presentation with following sections:
- poster structure, organization of materials, accuracy of final concept goals
- language accuracy
- presentation structure and oral delivery.
Resources
- worksheet 1: Creating and presenting a
poster;
- Internet;
- computer & PPT software.
Assessment
- self- and peer assessment
- direct observation of task;
performance and analysis of
products using rubric.
Lesson 2 Activity 1
Students work
Warm-up: Comments on posters presented and free discussion about CLIL basics.
Resources
- students posters on CLIL.
Assessment
- peer and self-assessment
comments on rubrics results.
Lesson 2 Activity 2
Students work
Follow-up:
- Read the article The integrated nature of CLIL by Moate;
- Answer the questions given on worksheet 2;
- Discussion on issues.
137
Resources
PPT Unit 2
- Moate J., The integrated nature of CLIL:
A Sociocultural Perspective;
- worksheet 2: Question Sheet on Moates
Article.
Assessment
- self- and peer assessment direct
observation of task performance
and analysis of products using
rubric.
Lesson 2 Activity 3
Students work
Identification and organisation of knowledge:
- collaborative space;
- teachers role;
- exploratory talk principles;
- IDRF;
- reflection on these issues.
Resources
- PPT Unit 2;
- video: Cooperative learning.
Assessment
- direct observation of group
discussion.
Lesson 2 Activity 4
Students work
Language identification:
- content & language integrated learning;
- transmission & transaction;
- genre;
- social, meta-, critical, expert, exploratory talk;
- collaborative space;
- dialogic class;
- commitment, transparency, consideration, joint ownership;
- answer definition sheet (see appendix 3).
Resources
- PPT Unit 2;
- worksheet 3: Definitions.
Assessment
- direct observation of group
discussion;
- feedback on definition sheet.
138
Lesson 2 Activity 5
Students work
Task for students: Once the students have read the article The Integrated Nature of CLIL:
A Sociocultural Perspective and answered the question sheet, they re-read the fragment
Fundamental integration language in learning and think about TEN basic principles which
are adequate for the CLIL collaborative space.
They write those ten principles under the heading The Decalog for my CLIL Collaborative
Space in a one-slide PowerPoint presentation. Once finished, they give decalog to a
classmate to correct (in return, they will also correct mates work). When they get
decalog back, they correct mistakes and include comments if appropriate.
Resources
- PPT Unit 2;
- Moate J., The integrated nature of
CLIL: A Sociocultural Perspective;
- worksheet 4: The Decalog for my
CLIL Collaborative Space;
- computer and PPT software.
Assessment
-
self-assessment.
Lesson 3 Activity 1
Students work
Warm up: Discussion and reflection on:
- principles of CLIL;
- components of a CLIL lesson.
Resources
- PPT Unit 3.
Assessment
- direct observation of discussion
self- and
peer assessment.
Lesson 3 Activity 2
Students work
Follow-up: Discussion and reflection on key elements in CLIL.
Resources
- PPT Unit 3.
139
Lesson 3 Activity 3
Students work
Identification and organisation of knowledge:
- exercise on Core CLIL Activators (see worksheet 5);
- discussion and reflection on Core CLIL Activators.
Resources
- PPT Unit 3;
- worksheet 5 (parts a and b): Core
CLIL Activators + Exercise.
Assessment
- direct observation of discussion;
- self- and peer assessment.
Lesson 3 Activity 4
Students work
Language identification:
- cognition;
- confident learner;
- creativity;
- intercultural understanding;
- cross-curricular collaboration.
Resources
- PPT Unit 3;
- worksheet 6: CLIL Glossary.
Assessment
- direct observation of discussion
- self- and peer assessment.
Lesson 3 Activity 5
Students work
Task for students:
Students answer the questionnaire on Teacher Competences according to their personal
achievements in CLIL methodology seen in these three units. Once the questionnaire is
completed, they share results with a classmate and discuss those results they have in
common, those that diverge, and why this is so.
Finally, they compare the conclusions to their past experience as students and make a
list of the most important differences.
Resources
- PPT Unit 3;
- worksheeet 7: Teacher Competences
Questionnaire (see below).
Assessment
- direct observation of discussion;
- self- and peer assessment
140
management
time management
classroom noise management
giving instructions
managing interaction
managing co-operative work
enhancing communication
INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION SKILLS
explain
present information
give instructions
clarify and check understanding
141
disputational
critical
meta
presentational
COURSE DESIGN SKILLS
Can adapt course syllabus so that it includes language, content and learning skills
outcomes.
Can integrate the language and subject curricula so that subject curricula support
language learning and vice-versa.
Can plan for the incorporation of other CLIL core features and driving principles
into course outlines and lesson planning, including:
student comprehension
142
Can cooperate with school managers, educational authorities, and other decision
makers.
Can agree on common teacher training goals with fellow teachers.
Can analyse learners needs with fellow teachers.
In the case of team- and co-teaching, can develop efficient task-sharing.
RELATIONSHIP BUILDING SKILLS
Can connect with each student personally.
Can foster belief in each students capacity to learn.
Respect diversity.
Can create a reassuring and enriching learning environment.
Can support individual and differentiated learning.
Can adapt materials and strategies to students needs.
Can engage SEN students (students with special educational needs).
(Adapted from P. Bertaux, C.M. Coonan, M.J. Frigols-Martn, P. Mehisto (2010), The CLIL Teachers
Competences Grid)
143
REFERENCES
Marsh D., 2007: Content & Language Integrated Learning. From CLIL methods for language
learning,
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4YoCQYJezNA&feature=mfu_in_order&pl
aynext=1&videos=hn4zF7x3fyc.
Moate J., 2010: The integrated nature of CLIL: A Sociocultural Perspective. In
International CLIL Research Journal, vol. 1 (3)/ 2010.
144
CLIL through CLIL is an in-service training course for teachers who wish to learn
about CLIL and engage their students in such learning by developing and delivering
CLIL modules in their schools. The course provides first-hand experience of CLIL by
being taught partly in a foreign language.
AECLIL Partner
Topic
CLIL
CLIL methodology
CLIL module
Subject area
Teaching methodology
Language
English
Language Level
B2 or above
Target group
Time
teachers
teacher trainers
16 hours (2-3 days)
Aims
Products/outcomes
Classroom activities
145
Assessment tools
Assessment criteria
Content
Language
Cooperative work
Resources
Step 1
Students work
Icebreaker for getting to know each other and for discussing expectations and
concerns about the course.
Resources
- worksheet: written instructions for
Mix Freeze Pair.
Assessment
- direct observation of task
performance.
Step 2
Students work
Clarify understanding of objectives of the workshop and of CLIL assessment.
Resources
- handout: KWL-chart (with strategy
description).
Assessment
- direct observation of learners;
- participation in discussion.
Step 3
Students work
Clarify the concept of CLIL.
Use the KWL-chart for individual and group work.
Answer the question What do I know or think I know about CLIL? Speculate on
what CLIL means. Fill in the K column.
Answer the question What do I want to know about CLIL? Think and write
questions in the W column.
146
Resources
- handout: KWL-chart (with strategy
description);
- KWL-grid on board.
Assessment
monitoring how K & W columns are
filled in: number of entries, not quality,
as this is preparation for the new
learning.
Step 4
Students work
Become familiar with INSERT strategy for self-monitoring understanding of text.
Resources
- handout: INSERT (symbols and
meaning written on board).
Assessment
- checking
understanding
meaning / use of symbols.
of
Step 5
Students work
Read using INSERT, looking for answers to the questions in W column of the
KWL-chart; those who finish reading early fill in INSERT chart.
Resources
- handout: Content and Language
Integrated Learning.
Assessment
- monitoring of INSERT use while
reading.
Step 6
Students work
Discussion to clarify answers to questions in W column of the KWL-chart.
Resources
- KWL-chart;
- handout: Content and Language
Integrated Learning.
Assessment
- participation in discussions.
Step 7
Students work
Fill in the L column of the KWL-chart.
Resources
- KWL-chart.
Assessment
- quality of entries in L column.
147
Step 8
Students work
Prepare CLIL concept map in groups of 3-4.
Share concept maps with whole group.
Resources
- flipchart paper, markers.
Assessment
- quality (clarity, logic) of concept
map.
Step 9
Students work
In groups of 3 or 4 the participants are given a set of 12 questions and 12 answers.
They divide them among themselves, without knowing at this stage which answer
matches which question. The group members take turns reading aloud their questions
(one at a time) and then all together try to identify the appropriate answer from the
stack of answers they have. The person who finds the answer first will:
- read it aloud
- argue why they think this is the appropriate answer (using language cues).
Extension if time allows: the groups choose one question that they find very
important and write their own answer to the parents.
Resources
- worksheet: Parents ask experts
answer (questions and answers cut up
and mixed).
Assessment
- correct matching of answers to the
questions;
- for the extension activity: quality of
answers provided to selected
question.
Step 10
Students work
In groups of 3-4 students answer the questions How may I introduce CLIL in my
teaching? Who would I have to collaborate with and how?
Acknowledge form for assessment of group processes and use it as a self-assessment
tool during group work from here on.
Resources
- handout : Group Self-Assessment for
Discussions;
- Trainers Checklist of Group Work.
Assessment
- monitoring group processes;
- quality of answers.
148
Step 11
Students work
Plan a CLIL unit in small groups set up based on age group of students involved or
subject matter taught.
Resources
- handout: Planning a CLIL Unit (Unit
plan; planning matrix; guiding questions).
Assessment
- assessment is done by looking at the
grid for unit planning.
Step 12
Students work
Present unit plan; provide and receive feedback (from peers and trainer).
Assessment
- (self-)assessment of participants in
the CLIL through CLIL training
Programme.
Resources
- Analytic assessment grid for content, languageand cooperative work (see below);
- Participants self-evaluation grid.
Criteria
CONT ENT
Use of basic
subject
concepts
and
knowledge
Application
of
knowledge
to new
situations
Creativity
5
excellent
4
good
3
satisfactory
2
almost satisfactory
1
unsatisfactory
Provides a complex,
original definition of
CLIL in ca 200 words,
which identifies at
least four essential
features of CLIL.
Provides a correct
definition of CLIL
using some of the
wording from the
reading materials
and some original
elements.
Identifies one
complete definition
of CLIL in the
reading materials
provided during the
training.
Designs and is
completely prepared
to deliver one at least
15-hour CLIL module
in his/her school.
Correctly and
completely adjusts
the CLIL module/
unit designed in a
group during
training to his/her
students learning
needs and is be
ready to start
delivering it.
149
Score
COOPERATION
LANGUAGE
Criteria
5
excellent
4
good
3
satisfactory
2
almost satisfactory
1
unsatisfactory
Use of
language
(L2=EN)
listening
reading
Understands all
essential
communication (oral
and written) related to
CLIL in L2.
Understands most
essential
communication
(oral and written)
related to CLIL in
L2.
Understands some
essential
communication (oral
and written) related
to CLIL in L2.
Understands some
communication (oral
and written) related to
CLIL in L2.
Use of
language
(L2=EN)
speaking
writing
Produces at least
two arguments
(orally and in
writing) for adoption
of CLIL in his/her
school in L2.
Produces at least
one argument
(orally or in writing)
for adoption of CLIL
in his/her school in
L2.
Use of
language
(L2=EN)
writing
Produces a draft
design of a CLIL
module in L2.
Produces most of a
draft design of a
CLIL module in L2
or all with support
from trainer / other
participants.
Contributes at least
one correct and
relevant element to
the draft design of a
CLIL module in L2.
Contributes at least
one element to the
draft design of a CLIL
module in L2.
Use of
language
(L2=EN)
interaction
Securing
shared
understanding
Sometimes
remembers to check
that group members
have shared and
correct
understanding of the
task before
proceeding to do it.
At least once,
remembers to check
that group members
have shared and
correct understanding
of the task before
proceeding to do it.
Staying on
task
Always focuses on
task.
Focuses on task
most of the time.
Sometimes focuses
on task.
Focuses at least on
one task.
Never focuses on
any group task.
Active
listening
Listens actively to
relevant
communication in
group most of the
time.
Listens actively to
relevant
communication in
group some of the
time.
Listens to relevant
communication in
group some of the
time.
Never listens to
communication in
group.
150
Score
In the space on the right, please, write the number that best reflects your self-assessment as a learner,
and comment on why you have chosen that number.
MY EVALUATION
1
lacking
2
adequate
Evaluation of training
as a whole
Content acquisition
Development of
concepts
Involvement in
communication
Use of L2
Attitude
What interested me
most
151
3
good
4
Excellent
152
GLOSSARY
Mara Ortiz, Beatriz Lpez
153
CLIL experience [BG: CLIL ; DE: Erfahrung mit bilingualem Unterricht; ES:
experiencia de AICLE; FR: exprience dEMILE; IT: esperienza CLIL; LV: CLIL
pieredze; RO: experien CLIL; SV: CLIL erfarenhet; TR: CLIL deneyimi]:
observation or participation of CLIL approach.
CLIL module [BG: CLIL ; DE: bilinguale Unterrichtseinheit; ES: mdulo
AICLE; FR: module EMILE; IT: modulo CLIL; LV: CLIL modulis; RO: modul
CLIL; SV: CLIL modul; TR: CLIL nitesi]: unit or component of CLIL. An independent
teaching/learning unit which is complete in itself. It is designed to teach topics of a specific subject.
Modules fit into a flexible learner oriented methodology.
CLIL strategy (BG: CLIL ; DE: methodische Strategien im bilingualen
Unterricht; ES: estrategia de AICLE; FR: stratgie EMILE; IT: strategia CLIL; LV:
CLIL stratija; RO: strategie CLIL; SV: CLIL strategi; TR: CLIL stratejisi]: strategies
used in CLIL methodology, for example: introduce rich input, scaffolding learning, promote
interaction or add intercultural dimension to the teaching when possible.
CLIL teachers reflective practice [BG: p CLIL ; DE:
Reflexion des bilingualen Unterrichts; ES: prctica reflexiva; FR: pratique rflexive
sur lexprience EMILE; IT: riflessione sullesperienza CLIL; LV: CLIL pedagoga
darbbas paanalze; RO: practica reflexiv a profesorilor CLIL; SV: CLIL lrarnas
reflekterande praktik; TR: renimde yanstc pratik]: teachers analyse and reflect on their
own practice in CLIL with the purpose of improving it.
Code switching [BG: ; DE: Hin-und Herschalten zwischen Mutterund Zielsprache; ES: cambio de cdigo; FR: changement de code; IT:
commutazione di codice, alternanza linguistica; LV: koda maia; RO: schimbarea
codului; SV: kodvxling; TR: kod deiimi]: practice ofmoving between two languages or
dialects in different contexts.
Cognition [BG: ; DE: Denken; ES: cognicin; FR: cognition; IT:
dimensione cognitiva; LV: izzia; RO: cogniie; SV: kognition; TR: kavrama]: one of
the 4Cs of CLIL methodology. It indicates process or result: in addition to thinking, remembering,
identifying and defining, reasoning, creative thinking and evaluating are also needed for academic
study.
Collaborative space [BG: ; DE: geschtzter Raum
fr Lernende; ES: espacio colaborativo; FR: espace collaboratif; IT: spazio
collaborativo; LV: sadarbbas vide; RO: spaiu de colaborare; SV:
sammarbetsplatsen; TR: ibirlii ortam]: a place where learners can try out ideas, confront
former understandings and negotiate together new meanings.
Creativity [BG: ; DE: Kreativitt; ES: creatividad; FR: crativit; IT:
creativit; LV: radoums; RO: creativitate; SV: kreativitet; TR: yaratclk]: ability to
produce something new, or to solve problems through imagination.
154
155
156
pekitiriciteknikler]: technique used to help learners move forward in their learning and
understanding.
Secondary school/education [BG: c ; DE: Sekundarschule in
den meisten Bundeslndern noch einmal in Sekundarstufe I und IIeingeteilt,12-16,
16-18 Jahre; ES: enseanza o educacin secundaria entre 12 y 16 aos; FR:
enseignement secondaire collge, 11-15 ans; lyce, 16-18 ans; IT: scuola secondaria
dal sesto al tredicesimo anno di scuola; LV: vidusskola skolni vecum no 16/19
gadiem; RO: nvmnt secundar 10/11-15/16, 16/17-18/19 an; SV:
gymnasieutbildning mellan16 och 20r gammal; TR: ortaretim 17-19 yln]:
second stage of compulsory formal education for children between 12 and 18 years old approx.
(students ages vary depending on each countrys educational system), more based on subject teaching.
Social talk [BG: ; DE: Alltagsgesprch; ES: conversacin social; FR:
langue pour la communication quotidienne; IT: lingua per la comunicazione
quotidiana; LV: ikdienas runas metode; RO: discurs social; SV: social-diskussion;
TR: sosyal konuma]: communication among individuals in a social context, such as when
students practice use of a foreign language in everyday discussions rather than for academic purposes.
Systematising integration of CLIL [BG: CLIL;
DE: systematische Integration von bilingualem Unterricht; ES: sistematizacin de la
integracin; FR: systmatisation de lintgration dEMILE; IT: integrazione del CLIL
nel sistema di istruzione; LV: CLIL integranas sistematizcija; RO: sistematizarea
integrrii CLIL; SV: systematisera integration av CLIL; TR: CLIL integrasyonunun
sistemletirilmesi]: the act of making CLIL an integral part of the education system.
Transaction [BG: ; DE: Transaktion; ES: transaccin; FR: transaction;
IT: transazione; LV: transakcija; RO: tranzaci; SV: transaktion; TR: iletiim]: a
communicative action or activity involving two or more parties that reciprocally affect or influence each
other.
Transmission [BG: ; DE: bertragung von Informationen; ES:
transmisin; FR: transmission; IT: trasmissione; LV: prstana; RO: transmitere;
SV: transmission; TR: iletim]: the act of sending a message, a picture, or other kind of
information.
University education [BG: ; DE: Universittsausbildung; ES:
educacin universitaria; FR: enseignement suprieur; IT: istruzione universitaria; LV:
augstk izgltba; RO: nvmnt superior; SV: universitetsutbildning; TR:
niversite eitimi]: part of higher, post-secondary, tertiary education; educational level following
secondary school dealing with undergraduate and postgraduate education, provided by colleges,
universities and institutes of technology, which includes teaching, research and applied work.
Validity [BG: ; DE: Validitt; ES: validez; FR: pertinence; IT: validit,
pertinenza; LV: validitte; RO: valabilitate; SV: validitet; TR: geerlik]: that can be
trusted because it assesses what should be assessed. See washback effect.
157
158
APPENDIX
159
Checklist
A proposal
Evaluation criteria for CLIL-Modules
CLIL-module
I - MODULE PLANNING
Global aims/goals
Content
classification / experience
principles / processes
evaluation / creation
Which thinking skills are involved in the steps of the different modules:
Lower-order thinking skills: defining, identifying, classifying.?
Higher-order thinking skills: explaining, applying, comparing, hypothesizing?
Communication (language)
Which CALP functions are involved? (CALP: Cognitive Academic Language Proficiency)
.....................................................................................................................................................
A2
B1
B2
C1
160
listening
reading
speaking
interacting
writing
Culture
Assessment planning
Do the assessment criteria cover all the CLIL components in an integrated way?
Are competence descriptors provided? Are they coherent with the module aims?
II - LESSON DELIVERY
Lesson planning
Teaching strategies
KWL strategy
brainstorming
questions
key words
..........................
161
visual aids
graphic organizers
Which thinking strategies are used to support learning (comprehension & production)
frames
cubing
imitative writing
....................................................
teachers speech
group work
pairwork
individual activities
internet research
warm up
multimedia
..................................................................................................................................
Teaching resources
Assessment practice
162
STUDENT QUESTIONNAIRE
You are asked to fill this questionnaire so that we can know your opinion on the
CLIL experience carried out this year. Indicate your responses with a "".
Thank you for your cooperation.
1.
Very important
Important
Partially important
Not important
2. In which of these situations have you used the foreign language and how
often?
Always or
very often
a. oral addressing to the class
b. discussion
c. interview
d. oral interchange with
teachers
e. oral interchange with
mates
f.
group work
g. others:
163
Often
Sometimes
Seldom /
never
group work
g. others:
3. Which strategies did you find more useful to accomplish the tasks?
Useful
a. listening to the teachers explanations
b. answering the teachers questions
c. answering my mates questions
d. using the examples presented by the
teacher
e. repeating verbally what I had
previously heard, read or written
f. trying to express orally, in my own
words, what I had heard, read or
written
g. using images, grids or graphs as
stimulus to speak
h. others:
i.
others:
j.
others:
164
Quite
useful
Not so
useful
Not
useful
4. When you spoke in a foreign language in this module (in a subject) you
consider important
Very
Partially Not
Important
important
important important
Promoted
in the
module
a. the correct
pronunciation of
words
b. the ability to
improvise
c. knowledge of
vocabulary
d. knowledge of the
contents
e. the use of facial
expressions, gestures
and body
movements
f. grammatical
correctness
g. clarity of exposition
h. the ability to
reformulate
i. check that the others
understand me when
I speak
j.
others:
5. Did this module help you improve your ability to express yourself in the
foreign language?
A lot
Enough
A little
None
6. How do you evaluate your learning of the subject studied in the foreign
language?
Very positive
Positive
Partially positive
165
Negative
Often
Sometimes
Seldom /
never
Useful
Partially useful
Not useful
10. Why?
____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
166
Why?
____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
12. If given the choice between CLIL and non CLIL experiences, which would
you prefer?
Why?
____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
167
TEACHER QUESTIONNAIRE
L2
Subject
Country
Class
Nr. Students
Dates
Nr. hours
Topics
MATERIALS PROVIDED
Authentic materials
Materials adapted from the
Internet
Material taken from foreign
language books
Original materials prepared by
teachers
Other
168
DESCRIPTION
Focus on L2
Focus on content
operation
Requires a complex
operation
Requires creativity
Classroom organization
Frontal lesson
Interactive lesson
Individual work
Pair work
Group work
Always
Frontal lesson
Interactive lesson
Individual work
Pair work
Group work
Control of learning
Written feedback
Oral feedback
Self-evaluation
Oral test
Written test
Other
169
Often
Sometimes
Seldom /
never
10
11
Other
170
You are asked to fill in this questionnaire so that we can know your opinion on the
CLIL experience carried out this year. Indicate your responses with a "".
Thank you for your cooperation.
1. Which are your previous experiences in CLIL teaching?
None
A few
Some
Many
2. How do you consider your experience of teaching in the CLIL module?
Very effective
Effective
Partially effective
Ineffective
others:
171
Often
Sometimes
Seldom /
never
Quite
useful
Not so
useful
Not
useful
others:
j.
others:
172
e. grammatical
correctness
f.
fuency
g. the ability to
reformulate
h. the ability to
understand and to be
understood
i.
others:
6. Do you think you have made progress in applying this methodology in your
teaching in the foreign language?
A lot
Enough
A little
None
7. How do you evaluate your teaching of the subject in the foreign language?
Very positive
Positive
Partially positive
Negative
173
Often
Sometimes
Seldom /
never
9. Which of the tools used have been more helpful to deliver your lessons?
audio/visual aids (films, graphs, images)
practical examples
web links
realia
____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
10. Do you think this CLIL experience will be useful for your professional future?
Very useful
Useful
Partially useful
Not useful
Why?
____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
11. Did you like this teaching experience?
Yes
NO
Why?
____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
12. If given the choice, would you like to have another CLIL experience?
Why?
____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
Title of CLIL experience
________________________________________________________________
Class level
_________________________________________________________________
Date
_________________________________________________________________
174
THE AUTHORS
Lucia Alberti
Teacher of English and teacher trainer
Liceo Scientifico Nicol Copernico
Pavia, Italia
[email protected]
Beatriz Lpez
Doctor in English Philology
Universidad Antonio de Nebrija
Madrid, Spain
[email protected]
Snds Akyildiz
Lecturer
School of Foreign Languages
Beytepe/Ankara, Turkey
[email protected]
AntonellaLovagnini
Teacher of Economic Geography
I.T.C.T. Bordoni
Pavia, Italy
[email protected]
Teresina Barbero
Teacher of French and teacher trainer
lend
Italia
[email protected]
Katia Maculotti
Teacher of Chemistry
I.I.S. Faravelli
Stradella, Italy
[email protected]
IneseBarkovska
Teacher of English and teacher trainer
DaugavpilsState gymnasia
Riga, Latvia
[email protected]
Fabrizio Maggi
Teacher of English and teacher trainer
Coordinator of the Rete CLIL della provincia
di Pavia
I.T.I.S. Cardano, Pavia, Italy
[email protected]
Caterina Cerutti
Teacher of German and teacher trainer
I.T.C.T. Bordoni
Pavia, Italia
[email protected]
Cristiana Merli
Teacher of English
I.I.S. Faravelli
Stradella, Italy
[email protected]
Maria Kovacs
Carmen Maria Chiiu
English teacher and teacher trainer
Education expert
Romanian Reading and Writing for Critical Romanian Reading and Writing for Critical
Thinking Association
Thinking Association,
ClujNapoca, Romania
ClujNapoca, Romania
[email protected]
[email protected]
John Clegg
Education consultant specialising in CLIL
based in London
[email protected]
Franca Quartapelle
Teacher of German and teacher trainer
lend
Italia
[email protected]
zlemDuyarCokun
Ass. Prof. Dr.
Physics Engineering
DepartmentHacettepeUniversity
Beytepe/Ankara, Turkey
Bettina Schameitat
Teacher of Latin, French and Italian,
teacher trainer
Gymnasium an der Gartenstrae
Mnchengladbach, Deutschland
[email protected]
175
Elena Orduna
Doctor in English Philology
Universidad Antonio de Nebrija
Madrid, Spain
[email protected]
FgenTabak
Prof. Dr.,
Physics Engineering Department
Hacettepe University
Beytepe/Ankara, Turkey
[email protected]
Marta Gens
Teacher of Linguistics and teacher trainer
Universidad Antonio de Nebrija
Madrid, Spain
[email protected]
Elena Voltan
Teacher of Italian
Universit degli studi
Pavia, Italia
elena.voltan@unipv
Mara Ortiz
Teacher of Terminology and teacher trainer
Universidad Antonio de Nebrija
Madrid, Spain
[email protected]
176