David Marsh on CLIL

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 12 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 17

  • @CambridgeUPELT
    @CambridgeUPELT  2 года назад +1

    Thank you for watching this video! From 25th April 2022, we won’t be sharing any new content on this channel. We’d love for you to join us over at ruclips.net/user/cambridgeenglishtv for lots more English teaching and learning content.

  • @marthamoto
    @marthamoto 10 лет назад +2

    A very interesting approach to face the challenges of the 21st century

  • @bettymolerot
    @bettymolerot 5 лет назад +10

    Interestingly there is no mention of the role played by learners within CLIL...

  • @judebolayo4305
    @judebolayo4305 10 лет назад

    What he just said--all of it--resounds with me. Indeed, it has something to do about the support (but not all of it as every teacher knows).

    • @capedcrusadergrimsby
      @capedcrusadergrimsby 7 лет назад

      That's right. It's ironically much better at supporting language performance than language teaching. But if you want to know why you'll have to buy my book.

  • @ganazpaker1662
    @ganazpaker1662 5 лет назад +1

    Is direct method of teaching language use in this approach? Or clil is a part of improvement for direct method??? ... And what positions in clil is direct method??

  • @Miss_ESL
    @Miss_ESL 4 года назад +11

    3:47 he is blaming learners not learning on bad teachers who taught badly in the first place! This is ludicrous. Teachers are often very good in their native language, but the English language expected of them when teaching at P1 & 2 sits on the CEFR at B1+
    This is *NOT* being a bad teacher, it is pushing a broken product on an already over stretched area, and blaming teachers for its failure rather than the fact the content is far too much for the age of the learners. My nephew is 7. He's Spanish. His primary 2 CLIL work books talks about waxing and waning moons, water purification plants, poaching, and regulated fishing! These are difficult concepts for an L1 child of 7 to understand, let alone an L2 speaker whose poor P2 teacher *may* have a B1 level of English if they're lucky.
    CLIL is great in high schools if the students are already aware of English. But expecting a 7 year-old Spanish child to read about regulated fishing practices in English is just ludicrous and is overall damaging as he's not going to learn these things. CLIL primary textbooks are set up so they look like they're working, as all the learner has to do is copy the words in bold, but there is little to no actual comprehension. Absolute failure of a method for primary schools.

    • @scar383
      @scar383 3 года назад +2

      mehn mehn mehn mehn I LOVE YOU!!!!!!!!! YOU HAVE SAID IT ALL!!!!!! I AM FACING THE SAME SHIT EVERY DAY IN MY LIFE HERE IN BRAZIL!!! THESE SO-CALLED EXPERTS JUST DERIVE SOME KIND OF SYSTEM AND THINK IT IS GOING TO WORK CAUSE THEY FILLED THE BOOKS WITH LOTS OF TRASH. I STAND WITH YOU 100%

    • @Ben-rz9cf
      @Ben-rz9cf 3 года назад +1

      @@scar383 I have been studying
      a TEFL course and I agree it’s mostly a bunch of bullshit acronyms. Look into the Michel Thomas method if you want something that actually works. However I am not sure if there exists course material for teaching English, it has mostly been applied to people with English as L1

    • @scar383
      @scar383 3 года назад

      @@Ben-rz9cf thanks you soo much I Will Do that NOW!!

  • @Finsalinfinit
    @Finsalinfinit 7 лет назад

    excellent

  • @Elite_Animator
    @Elite_Animator 11 лет назад +3

    CLIL also reverses male pattern baldness

  • @bukrat
    @bukrat 11 лет назад

    Is it hard to use CLIL?

    • @maesylima6816
      @maesylima6816 3 года назад +1

      It's challenging

    • @maesylima6816
      @maesylima6816 3 года назад +1

      I have CLIL certificate from Cambridge university, I took a preparatory course for the certificate, It took me 6 months for getting ready to the exam, I learned a lot.