400 Sprache
Filtern
Sprache
- Englisch (3) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- Aktiver Wortschatz (1)
- Bilingualer Unterricht (1)
- Business English (1)
- Conceptual Metaphor Theory (1)
- Content and Language Integrated Learning (1)
- Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) (1)
- Empirical Research (1)
- Fremdsprachenunterricht (1)
- Instructed Second Language Acquisition (1)
- Kognitive Linguistik (1)
- Lehrerbildung (1)
- Lehrerkompetenzen (1)
- Metapher (1)
- Passiver Wortschatz (1)
- Referenzrahmen (1)
- Unterrichtsforschung (1)
- Vocabulary (1)
- Vokabellernen (1)
- Wirtschaftsenglisch (1)
- Wortschatz (1)
- teacher training (1)
Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) has experienced growing importance in the last decades and an increasing number of schools have already implemented CLIL programmes or are planning to do so. Though the potentials of CLIL programmes are widely praised, first research results also raise doubts if CLIL students can live up to these high expectations. Both Fehling (2005) as well as Rumlich (2013; 2016), for example, found that CLIL programmes not inevitably show the expected results but that the CLIL students’ success might also be at least partially explained by other influences, such as the selection process of future CLIL students. Hence, CLIL students apparently fall short of the high expectations that are usually connected to the respective CLIL programmes and as this is mainly based on the unsatisfactory quality of these programmes, Rumlich concludes that “it is now high time to focus on the quality of CLIL provision” (Rumlich 2016: 452). He continues to explain that “the promises of CLIL do not materialise automatically owing to the fact that another language is used for learning in a non-language subject” (Rumlich 2016: 452). It must be assumed that the success of CLIL teaching also highly depends on the quality of the CLIL teachers.
In contrast to the continuously growing number of CLIL schools, however, the number of specifically trained CLIL teachers is comparably small. In Germany, CLIL teachers are not (yet) required to attend any special training in order to teach in a CLIL programme. Notwithstanding, is it sufficient for a CLIL teacher only to be trained in the content subject and the foreign language? Or does CLIL teaching require more than the sum of these two components? Do CLIL teachers need additional teaching competences to the ones of a content and a language teacher? In the light of the recent findings of CLIL programmes falling short of the high expectations, the answer to these questions must clearly be “Yes”. Hence, in order to appropriately train (future) CLIL teachers, special training programmes need to be developed which consider the teachers’ individual educational backgrounds, i.e. their qualifications as language and/or as content teachers and build up on these competences through adding the CLIL-specific teaching competences.
Therefore, this thesis aims at developing a German Framework for CLIL Teacher Education, which considers both the already published, theory-based standards of CLIL teacher education as well as the practical perspective of experienced CLIL teachers in Germany. This German Framework for CLIL Teacher Education classifies the different teaching competences, which are derived from integrating the theoretical and the practical perspective on CLIL teacher education, with regard to the three different competence areas, i.e. the general teaching competence, the language teaching competence and the subject teaching competence and is hence adaptable to different CLIL settings and educational backgrounds. In addition to developing this German Framework for CLIL Teacher Education, which provides the content of future CLIL teacher education programmes, this thesis discusses different forms of structurally implementing CLIL teacher education programmes in the existing structures of teacher education in Germany. This is achieved through analysing the current state of the art of CLIL teacher education at German universities and systematising the different forms of implementing these training programmes in the prevailing educational structures. Building on these first two steps, in the third and final step, this thesis develops a CLIL teacher education programme at a German university that is based on the results and elements of the German Framework for CLIL Teacher Education as well as the state of the art of CLIL teacher education in Germany. Thus, this thesis is allocated at the intersection between foreign language teaching as well as teacher education and is structured in eleven chapters.
Eine Fremdsprache ist mit viel Zeit, Geduld und Motivation erlernbar. Um eine Fremdsprache jedoch zu beherrschen, braucht man vertiefte Kenntnisse der Grammatik, einen sehr großen Wortschatz und eine authentische, möglichst muttersprachenähnliche ("native-like") Aussprache. Das Forschungs-projekt leistet einen Beitrag zur Untersuchung der Aussprache.
Mittels einer empirischen Untersuchung der Aussprache von Anglistik-Studierenden an der Universität Koblenz-Landau (Campus Koblenz) wird einer der schwierigsten Laute des amerikanischen Englisch analysiert. Es ist bekannt, dass der amerikanische /r/-Laut von Deutschen sehr häufig falsch ausgesprochen wird (cf. Celce-Murcia et al. 2010 und Swan & Smith 2001). Oftmals sind sich die SprecherInnen ihrer fehlerhaften Aussprache nicht einmal bewusst. Dementsprechend behandelt dieses Forschungsprojekt die folgenden Hypothesen:
(1. Hypothese) Das post-vokalische /r/ in einer unbetonten Silbe am Ende eines Wortes wird häufig nicht ausgesprochen (wie im britischen Englisch). Mittels einer spektrographischen Analyse kann die Aussprache einiger englischer Ausdrücke wie answer, Arthur, either und rather besser untersucht werden, um festzustellen, wie oft dieses /r/ fehlt.
(2. Hypothese) Das /r/ vor einer betonten Silbe wird nur in bestimmten Fällen hörbar ausgesprochen. Oft ist dies vom folgenden Vokal im Wort abhängig. Es wird behauptet, dass der /r/-Laut durch Vokale, die durch eine Rundung der Lippen erzeugt werden, beeinflusst wird. Der Koartikulation zufolge wird der /r/-Laut durch einen labialisierten stimmhaften velaren Approximanten /w/ ersetzt. Anhand verschiedener Wörter wie crawled, rat, rode, room und tree wird die /r/-Qualität in unterschiedlichen Laut-Umgebungen untersucht werden, da hier jeweils ein anderer Vokal dem /r/ folgt.
(3. Hypothese) Nach der Analyse der 1. Hypothese wird die Vokalqualität der unbetonten Silbe der vier englischen Wörter noch einmal und genauer untersucht. Häufig wird der Schwa-Laut in diesen Wörtern durch einen anderen Laut ersetzt. In diesem Fall wird der /ɐ/-Laut ausgesprochen. Um sich ein Bild von der Vokalqualität dieses Lautes machen zu können, werden drei deutsche Ausdrücke analysiert. Danach werden die deutschen Ausdrücken und die englischen Wörter mit einander verglichen. Die drei deutschen Ausdrücke sind in der, Müller und unser.
Zur Gewinnung der empirischen Daten lesen die Studierenden einen englischen Text ("Arthur the rat") und einen kurzen deutschen Satz, welche elektronisch aufgezeichnet werden. Danach werden die Tonaufzeichnungen mit Hilfe der Software "Praat" untersucht und ausgewertet. Das Ziel ist eine minutiöse Analyse ausreichend vieler authentischer Tonaufzeichnungen, anhand derer die Sprachschwierigkeiten deutscher Englischlernender mit dem /r/-Laut prognostiziert werden können. Ein solches Ergebnis ermöglicht es, Ausspracheschwierigkeiten von Anfang an entgegenzuwirken, indem in einem weiteren Schritt (der jedoch über das Ziel der Arbeit hinausgeht) entsprechende Übungsmaterialien entwickelt und eingesetzt werden. Letzteres ist nicht möglich ohne die solide Grundlagenforschung des Forschungsprojekts.
Over the last three decades researchers of Cognitive Metaphor Theory have shown conclusively that metaphor is motivated rather than arbitrary and often used to systematically map out conceptual territory. This cognitive semantic proposal holds the potential for alternative L2 teaching strategies. As an abstract domain, business discourse is naturally rich in metaphors and is additionally filled with consciously used metaphorical language to strategically manipulate clients and business partners. Business English courses especially stand to profit from metaphor-oriented language teaching, as (future) managers aim to quickly improve their language performance to be prepared for international business communication. In using metaphors, speakers as well as hearers conceptualize and thus experience one thing in terms of another. Having been made aware of the conceptual linkage, students are immediately equipped with a whole set of vocabulary they may already have learned for a concrete domain and are then able to elaborate in the more abstract area of business discourse. Enhanced metaphor awareness may thus prove to be a valuable vehicle for vocabulary acquisition as well as for vocabulary retention. This thesis is subdivided into ten chapters. With each successive chapter, the focus will increasingly sharpen on the main hypothesis that metaphor awareness raising and explicit teaching in the business English classroom assists the students to dip into their savings' and transfer already acquired vocabulary to abstract business discourse and thus to become more proficient business communicators. After an introduction to the main objectives, chapter two critically looks at the different strands of Cognitive Linguistic contributions to metaphor theory made within the last three decades and discusses the structure, function and processing of figurative language to single out relevant aspects of the language classroom applications. Chapter three narrows the perspective to the socio-economic discourse as the very target domain in focus and surveys the conceptual metaphors that have been identified for this target domain, namely the source domains most productive for the target and therefore most valuable for the language classroom. In chapter four Cognitive Linguistic findings are put in contact with language didactics; i.e., the Cognitive Linguistic basis is discussed in the context of language teaching and learning theories and a first classification of metaphor teaching in the theoretical framework of language didactics is proposed. Ten cornerstones summarize the theoretical output of the previous chapters and the respective didactic consequences are considered. Theories of cognitive psychology pertaining to noticing, processing, and storing metaphors are systematically revisited and expanded to formulate further didactic implications for metaphor teaching. The consequences drawn from both linguistic as well as didactic theory are translated into a list of ten short guidelines identifying essentials for the explicit integration of metaphors into the language classroom. In chapter five those experimental studies that have already been conducted in the field of Cognitive Linguistic-inspired figurative language teaching are systematically summarized and possible contributions to set up a didactic framework for metaphor teaching are investigated. Chapters six to nine then present a piece of original research. Starting out from five research questions tackling receptive and productive vocabulary acquisition and retention as well as the influence of and on the learner- level of language proficiency, a three-fold study was designed and conducted in a regular business English classroom and results are discussed in detail. The last chapter deals again with specific implications for teaching. Earlier statements about and claims for the language classroom are revisited and refined on the basis of the theoretical linguistic, didactic and empirical findings, and an agenda for further empirical investigations is sketched out.