The Plurilingual and Multimodal Management of Participation and Subject Complexity in University CLIL Teamwork

dc.contributor.author
Borràs Riba, Eulàlia
dc.contributor.author
Moore, Emilee
dc.date.accessioned
2024-12-05T22:51:36Z
dc.date.available
2024-12-05T22:51:36Z
dc.date.issued
2019-03-01T08:23:11Z
dc.date.issued
2019-03-01T08:23:11Z
dc.date.issued
2019
dc.identifier
https://doi.org/10.5539/elt.v12n2p100
dc.identifier
1916-4742
dc.identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/10459.1/65832
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10459.1/65832
dc.description.abstract
This paper explores the interactions of a groupwork team composed of both local and exchange students, with heterogeneous competence in English, in an English-medium CLIL context at a technical university in Catalonia. Plurilingual and multimodal conversation analysis is used to trace how the students jointly complete an academic task. The research conducted specifically analyses how students categorise themselves and each other in terms of their expertise, and the procedures and resources the students deploy to accomplish the task. The data show that participants’ heterogeneous linguistic repertoires are not an obstacle for successfully completing the task, for constructing subject knowledge, or for establishing a climate of mutual understanding and cooperation. The analysis refers to the tension emerging in the data between the interactional principles of progressivity –actions oriented towards task completion– and intersubjectivity –actions oriented towards resolving communicative difficulties. It also focuses on how co-participants mobilise diverse resources from their communicative repertoires, including plurilingual resources, gesture and material artefacts, in managing the task. The main argument put forward is that in instructional environments in which students are expected to build subject matter knowledge using languages that they are simultaneously learning (e.g. CLIL), considering their whole communicative repertoires as valuable resources for their learning is a promising approach.
dc.language
eng
dc.publisher
Canadian Center of Science and Education (CCSE)
dc.relation
Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.5539/elt.v12n2p100
dc.relation
English Language Teaching, 2019, vol. 12, núm. 2, p. 100-112
dc.rights
cc-by (c) Eulàlia Borràs et al., 2019
dc.rights
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.subject
Progressivity
dc.subject
Intersubjectivity
dc.subject
Repair
dc.subject
Teamwork tasks
dc.title
The Plurilingual and Multimodal Management of Participation and Subject Complexity in University CLIL Teamwork
dc.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
dc.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion


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