Some teachers who are implementing different areas through English have asked me to help them enable their students to give definitions of essential concepts in their areas in English. Therefore, I will try to give some clues on this complex issue. Let me start by summarizing what a correct definition should consist of. I would say that a formal definition consists of three
parts.
- The term (word or phrase) to be defined
- The class of object or concept to which the term
belongs.
- The differentiating characteristics that
distinguish it from all others of its class
Examples:
- Water (term) is a liquid (class)
made up of molecules of hydrogen and oxygen in the ratio of 2 to 1 (differentiating
characteristics).
- Comic books (term) are sequential and
narrative publications (class) consisting of illustrations,
captions, dialogue balloons, and often focus on super-powered heroes (differentiating
characteristics).
- Astronomy (term) is a branch of scientific
study (class) primarily concerned with celestial objects inside and
outside of the earth's atmosphere (differentiating characteristics).
Now the
question is: how can we help students in
CLIL contexts to define essential concepts both orally and in written form in the area they are being taught
through English? I suggest helping with some language support and using mind maps that help them consolidate the concepts they have learnt.
Apart from this, we should provide students with activities that enable
them to revise the new vocabulary. It goes beyond the scope of this post to list a big number of possible activities but let
me propose some basic types that can be helpful: a loop game which is only one of the many practical activities for CLIL classrooms by Keith Kelly , a matching exercise on Geography terms and
a Pyramid game, an activity
adapted from a Russian TV programme which can be adapted to any content area.
Another thing that is highly advisable is to give students good models of definitions. An example of a good glossary of geographic terms can be found here. For biological terms, this is a good site.
Another thing that is highly advisable is to give students good models of definitions. An example of a good glossary of geographic terms can be found here. For biological terms, this is a good site.
Last but not least, I recommend making definitions a natural part of everyday teaching practice by prompting students' use of definitions in their daily oral interactions. Below these lines I have listed some examples of the classroom language you can use:
What is a…?
Give me
definition of a…
How would
you define a…?
Who can
define/give me a definition of…?
Can anyone
give me a definition of…?
What do we
call this?
What is the
name/(technical) term for this?
We will comment on the usefulness of the suggested activities in our next seminar session on January 28th. Apart from this, we will talk about the features of good CLIL materials and analyze some examples.
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