CLIL and elitism: Myth or reality?
Fecha
2020
Autores
Título de la revista
ISSN de la revista
Título del volumen
Editor
Routledge Taylor & Francis
Resumen
This article aims to shed light on the question of elitism in CLIL by
exploring empirical evidence taken from a large-scale longitudinal
investigation based in Spain. To this end, it reports on a quantitative
study into the effects of CLIL programmes on the English language
attainment of primary and secondary education students in monolingual
contexts. The study uses a sample of 2024 students from twelve
monolingual provinces in Spain; has guaranteed the homogeneity of
bilingual and non-bilingual groups; and has factored in several
intervening variables. It approaches the topic from a three-pronged
perspective: by determining whether the most motivated, intelligent,
and linguistically proficient students are in fact found in CLIL groups; by
analysing the possible differential effect of socio-economic variables on
L2 attainment; and by examining whether CLIL has the potential to work
even in disadvantaged contexts. The results suggest that, while certain
variables impact on language education in both CLIL and non-CLIL
settings, others do not have such a substantial effect in CLIL scenarios as
in non-bilingual settings. Thus the broader take-away is that commonly
harboured beliefs vis-à-vis the elitism of bilingual programmes need to
be re-examined and a possible future research agenda is suggested to
continue advancing in this area.
Descripción
Palabras clave
CLIL; elitism; setting; socioeconomic status; type of school