Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/12253
Título: What do students talk about? The relevance of content-focused and non-content-focused talk types within peer-interaction CLIL tasks
Autores/as: Fuentes, Miquel Ángel
Clasificación UNESCO: 570107 Lengua y literatura
550510 Filología
Palabras clave: CLIL
Talk-types
Science learning
TEFL
Teacher development
Fecha de publicación: 2013
Publicación seriada: LFE. Revista de Lenguas para Fines Específicos 
Resumen: This paper observes the different talk types that occur in an instance of peer interaction in Science through English CLIL classroom and attempts at providing a categorization of the students talk and analyzing their function. The sample chosen corresponds to a team of five students in their first year of secondary education from a state school set in a working class neighborhood on the outskirts of Barcelona. Using the framework described by Mercer (2004) and later developed by Pierce & Gilles (2008) and Moate (2011), this study analyzes what the impact of different content-focused and non-content-focusedtalk types in the construction of knowledge is, together with their influence onthe flow of the task through content analysis with the support of conversation and multimodal analysis. Results point out that conversation segments covering content are relevant but, simultaneously, episodes with an interpersonal use of language are also exploited for a wide range of purposes.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/12253
ISSN: 1133-1127
Fuente: LFE. Revista de Lenguas para Fines Específicos [ISSN 1133-1127], n. 19, p. 80-108
Colección:LFE, Rev. leng. fines específ. n.19, 2013 
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