Windows on CLIL : Content and Language Integrated Learning in the European Spotlight /
edited by Anne Maljers, David Marsh and Dieter Wolff.
- 1st ed.
- The Hague : Alkmaar ; European Platform for Dutch Education, 2007.
- 178 p. : ill. ; 22 cm.
Includes bibliographical references.
Foreword Windows on CLIL in: 1. Armenia / Margaret Apresyan 2. Austria / Gunther Abuja 3. Belgium (French-speaking) / Mary Chopey-Paquet 4. Bulgaria / Stefka Kitanova 5. Czech Republic / Jarmila Novotna & Marie Hofmannova 6. Estonia / Hiie Asser & Peeter Mehisto 7. Finland / David Marsh, Heini-Marja Jarvinen & Kim Haataja 8. France / Patricia Bertaux 9. Germany / Dieter Wolff 10. Hungary / Judith Kovacs 11. Italy / Gisella Langé 12. The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia / Elena Sentevska 13. Malta / Antoinette Camilleri Grima 14. The Netherlands / Anne Maljers 15. Norway / Britt Wenche Svenhard, Kim Servant, Glenn Ole Hellekjaer & Henrik Bohn 16. Poland / Bronislawa Zielonka 17. Slovakia / Danica Laukova 18. Spain / Carmen Munoz 19. Sweden / Sigrid Dentler 20. United Kingdom, England / Do Coyle
"Bilingual and multilingual education have, for decades, played an important role in European education. Yet, since the advent of Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) in 1994, the speed at which this form of bilingual education has spread across Europe has surprised even its most ardent of advocates. This rapid spread has had a major impact on the European educational landscape since first reported on a country-by-country basis in Teaching Content in a Foreign Language (European Platform, 1996). Windows on CLIL - Content and Language Integrated Learning in the European Spotlight provides insight into how CLIL is being carried out in 20 European countries. Complementing the national profiles reported in Content and Language Integrated Learning in Schools in Europe (Eurydice, 2006), the authors describe various attributes of good practice as found in their specific contexts. This involves focus on the linguistic situation of the respective country, the local 'history' of CLIL, general associated political and educational factors, types of CLIL models applied, and curriculum development and certification. This publication is the result of cooperation between the European Platform for Dutch Education and the Council of Europe's European Centre for Modern Languages, Graz, within the framework of the ECML's 2nd medium-term programme 2004-2007, Languages for Social Cohension." (Book Cover)