How does CLIL affect the acquisition of reading comprehension in the mother tongue? A comparative study in secondary education
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10481/60408Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Nieto, EstherEditorial
Universidad de Granada
Materia
CLIL Bilingual education Reading comprehension Mother tongue Transfer
Fecha
2017Referencia bibliográfica
Nieto, E. (2017): How does CLIL affect the acquisition of reading comprehension in the mother tongue? A comparative study in secondary education, Investigaciones Sobre Lectura, 8, 7-26. [http://hdl.handle.net/10481/60408]
Resumen
In the last two decades, CLIL
(content and language integrated
learning) programmes, in which
school subjects such as history,
geography or mathematics are taught
by means of an additional language,
have rapidly spread over all the
world, since CLIL has been deemed
to be an innovative and effective
approach for second language
learning. Therefore, research on
CLIL has precisely focused on the
acquisition of the L2, while other
aspects, such as the assimilation of
the content taught by means of the
second language or the impact of
CLIL programmes on the mother
tongue have received less attention.
In this sense, this paper examines
how CLIL programmes affect the
development of reading
comprehension in the mother tongue.
To do so, the outcomes in a test of
reading comprehension of CLIL (n =
1,119) and non-CLIL students (=
15,984) enrolled in the 2nd year of
secondary education (13-14 yearsold) were compared. The results
indicated that the acquisition of literal
reading comprehension and inferential
reading comprehension in the mother
tongue significantly benefit from CLIL,
whereas no significant differences have
been detected in critical reading
comprehension. The reading skills most
benefited by CLIL were global
comprehension, lexical comprehension,
understanding of space-time
relationships, integration of extratextual information, and identification
of extra-textual relations.
These data are explained by the critical
importance of reading strategies to
succeed in CLIL settings, and by the
transfer of these strategies between L1
and L2 and vice versa. This hypothesis
is supported by previous research on
immersion programmes.