The Convergence of CLIL, STEAM and Storytelling: Challenges and Potentials in Proposals for Primary Education
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/111198Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Corral Robles, Silvia; Sanz de la Cal, Esther; Hughes, Stephen Pearse; Ortega Martín, José LuisMateria
Bilingual Education CLIL STEAM Story-based learning
Fecha
2024Referencia bibliográfica
Corral-Robles, S., Sanz de La Cal, E., Hughes, S.P., & Ortega-Martín, J. L. (2024). The convergence of CLIL, STEAM and storytelling: Challenges and potentials in proposals for primary education. Transdisciplinarity in Citizenship Education: Challenges, Advances, and Research Proposals, 81-99.
Patrocinador
European Commission and carried out within the Erasmus+ Project “STEAM Education and Foreign Language Learning in Europe” (SeLFiE) with reference 2020-1-ES01-KA201-081850.Resumen
In the rapidly changing and dynamic field of primary education, pioneering methodologies coalesce with more traditional forms of learning. Here, two recently introduced innovative approaches within education include Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) and education in Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Mathematics (STEAM), which exist as increasingly adopted approaches alongside the longstanding educational component of storytelling. While extensive research has been conducted on these separate areas, there is a gap in the literature in cases where all three converge. In the present study, 16 members of teaching staff from six primary-level plurilingual schools from Spain, Malta and Poland describe their experience of implementing storybased learning situations with in CLIL and STEAM environments. These accounts, based on recorded semi-structured interviews involving qualitative analysis, including the use of N-Vivo software, point to a series of advantages of the model, ranging from enhanced collaboration, motivation and meaningful learning; at the same time, the study highlights limitations, including the need for training, high levels of coordination, and the availability of resources.




