17.4a CLIL in The Classroom - Nina Lauder - UPO 2009
17.4a CLIL in The Classroom - Nina Lauder - UPO 2009
A successful CLIL lesson should combine elements of the four principles below:
Planning
When teaching CLIL lessons, plan thoroughly to ensure that the foreign
language is accessible and that the content is not ‘watered’ down. Accessing and
understanding the content is the main aim of a CLIL lesson. The language is a
tool for delivering the content.
Use the most effective teaching and learning styles from each subject area and
combine them for a CLIL lesson. This will cater for a variety of learning styles;
in addition teachers will develop professionally from working together,
transferring the different teaching techniques across the two subjects.
Pupils will need to be armed with language learning skills and strategies in order
to help them access cognitively challenging content.
Again, key listening skills and techniques need to be taught. This might consist
of brainstorming vocabulary prior to listening, listening for gist, predicting.
Writing will be more effective if a staged approach is used, starting with single
word based activities, like labelling, checklists, bullet points. Writing frames are
an integral part of the success of the early writing that pupils are able to produce.
The aim of writing activities will be for pupils to effectively communicate the
content they have learnt, demonstrating their understanding. Pupils will
undoubtedly make grammatical errors, which will need to be addressed in a
language lesson.
4) Only the English teacher should focus on learning styles, not the content False
area teacher
5) Drilling and traditional classroom repetition activities are a fundamental False
part of CLIL
6) Pupils need to work on reading skills like scanning, skimming and True
reading for gist in CLIL lessons
7) In CLIL listening tasks should always be done with a CD False
NinaLauder/BILINGUAL MASTERS/2008