Teacher Targets: A model for CLIL and ELF teacher education in polytechnic settings

Main Article Content

Carmen Sancho Guinda
The objective of this paper is to present an alternative model for CLIL/ELF teacher education, called the Teacher Target Model, which may help hard-science teachers undertake English-medium instruction more efficiently. Conceived as a visual educational trope for changing mentalities and practices, it derives from the needs analysis of a group of polytechnic teachers who have participated in the cycles of in-service training seminars given at the Polytechnic University of Madrid since 2009.  Their notions, impressions, and video-recorded performances reveal that in general they hold a monolithic conception of classroom interactions and teaching procedures, with an ensuing impoverishment of genre and language repertoires. To bridge this gap, the model proposed here cross-weaves five discursive strands converging in university lectures, namely disciplinary discourse, (meta)discourse of the medium, embedded genres, lecture phase, and teaching style, thus fostering natural communication beyond the delivery of technical content and bringing ELF instruction closer to the CLIL dynamics.
Keywords
CLIL, ELF, teacher education, polytechnic environments, language and genre repertoires

Article Details

How to Cite
Sancho Guinda, Carmen. “Teacher Targets: A model for CLIL and ELF teacher education in polytechnic settings”. Language Value, vol.VOL 5, pp. 76-106, https://raco.cat/index.php/LanguageValue/article/view/302108.
Author Biography

Carmen Sancho Guinda, Departamento de Lingüística Aplicada a la Ciencia y a la Tecnología Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain EIAE (Escuela de Ingeniería Aeronáutica y del Espacio)

Carmen Sancho Guinda is senior lecturer in the Department of Applied Linguistics at the Polytechnic University of Madrid, where she teaches English for Academic Purposes, Professional Communication, and in-service seminars for engineering teachers undertaking English-medium instruction. Her research focus is the interdisciplinary analysis of academic and professional discourses and innovation in the learning of academic competencies. Her most recent publications are Stance and Voice in Written Academic Genres (Palgrave, 2012), co-edited with Ken Hyland, and Narratives in Academic and Professional Genres (Peter Lang, 2013), co-edited with Maurizio Gotti.