
Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL): A Methodology of Bilingual Teaching
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Content
- Intro
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Bilingual Children
- Vignette "A Family Experiment"
- 1.1 Dismantling Myths and Legends of Bilingualism
- 1.2 The Guide for Bilingual Parents
- 1.3 The Graduate Medical School of Hanover
- 1.4 The Gap Between Knowing and Doing
- 1.5 The Dual System Hypothesis
- 1.6 The Unitary Language System Hypothesis
- Chapter 2 Nativist and Cognitive Positions
- Vignette "Language is the dress of thought"
- 2.1 The Research on Second Language Acquisition
- 2.2 Behaviorism and a Black Box
- 2.3 The Universal Grammar and Noam Chomsky
- 2.4 The Minimalist Position of Recursion
- 2.5 The Input and Output Hypotheses
- 2.6 Language Learning as a Social Process- The Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD)
- Chapter 3 Nature versus Nurture
- Vignette "The American Experience"
- 3.1 The Fundamental Difference Hypothesis
- 3.2 Linking Nature and Nurture
- 3.3 Anthropology Sheds a New Light
- 3.4 The Neuro-biological View
- 3.5 The Task-based Approach
- Chapter 4 Learning (Foreign) Languages in Cultural Contexts- Historic and Current Developments
- Vignette "The Dunera Boys"
- 4.1 Communicative Language Teaching and the Grammar Question
- 4.2 The Common European Framework for Languages
- 4.3 Rethinking Foreign Language Teaching
- 4.4 The Two Tales of CLIL
- 4.5 CLIL Example-Teaching "Bauhaus" Professor Ingrid Zeller
- Northwestern University
- Chapter 5 Dimensions and Contexts of Bilingual Teaching
- Vignette "Intercultural Encounters in Student Exchanges"
- 5.1 Scotland
- 5.2 Canada and the US
- 5.3 Australia (& Deutsche Schule Melbourne)
- 5.4 Germany and Europe
- 5.5 Learning Principles
- 5.6 Principles of Quality Teaching (Luther College)
- 5.7 Teaching Design as an Instructional Model (McKinnon Secondary College)
- 5.8 Linguistic Risk Taking (Ottawa)
- Chapter 6 Building Blocks of CLIL
- Vignette "Windows in the Foreign Language Classroom"
- 6.1 Features of Multi-perspective Learning
- 6.2 Guiding Questions for CLIL Lesson Planning
- 6.3 The 4 Cs Framework
- 6.4 Discourse Competences-Bridging BICS and CALP
- 6.5 The Language Triptych
- 6.6 The Bilingual Triangle and the Third Space
- 6.7 Task Design Wheel and Task-verbs
- 6.8 Primacy of Content
- 6.9 Scaffolding as a Dual Teaching Strategy
- Chapter 7 Literary CLIL
- Vignette "Intertextuality"
- 7.1 Literature as Part of the Bilingual Curriculum
- 7.2 Literature in the CEF
- 7.3 Selection Criteria
- 7.4 Narratives of Literary CLIL
- 7.5 Literary CLIL as a Theory of Practice
- 7.6 Study Design for Literary Analysis and Criticism
- 7.7 Literary Studies in Contexts, Genres and Target Countries
- 7.8 Intertextuality
- Chapter 8 CLIL Tools and Skills
- Vignette "Worksheet Compass"
- 8.1 Scaffolding as a Tool in CLIL
- 8.2 Task-based Language Teaching (TBLT)
- 8.3 English Unlimited (blended content-language learning)
- 8.4 The Visual Turn
- 8.5 Learnscapes
- Chapter 9 CLIL Modules
- Vignette "Teaching Units"
- 9.1 Measuring Your Media (A2)
- 9.2 Refugees (A2)
- 9.3 Analysing Political Cartoons (B1)
- 9.4 Jacobites and Enlightenment (B1)
- 9.5 Caledonia-Creating a Podcast (B2)
- 9.6 War and Peace-Calvin and Hobbes (B2)
- 9.7 Herringbone Technique (B2+)
- 9.8 Absolutism (B2+)
- 9.9 Reciprocal Teaching (C1)
- 9.10 International Relations-Libya (C1)
- Chapter 10 CLIL Challenges and Desiderata
- Vignette "Venn Diagram"
- 10.1 CLIL as a Catalyst for Change
- 10.2 The Innovative Potential
- 10.3 Competence and Content-a CLIL Example
- 10.4 Future Directions
- Glossary of Teaching Strategies and Learning Skills
- Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL): A Methodology of Bilingual Teaching
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