Promoting equitable literacy expectations in CLIL
Empowering student teachers’ attitude shifts through Reading to Learn in service-learning
This study explores the impact of two Service-Learning (SL) projects on student teachers’ preparation and
perceptions in relation to literacy teaching in English as a foreign language within CLIL programmes. The projects offered
hands-on training in preparing and delivering lessons applying
Rose and Martin’s (2012)
Reading to Learn (R2L) approach to support children at two Madrid primary schools implementing CLIL with high proportions of
at-risk pupils and socioculturally diverse student bodies. One hundred and thirteen undergraduate student teachers specialising in
English as a Foreign Language at the Complutense University School of Education participated in the SL projects. The projects’
goals included developing the students’ civic engagement and disposition to gain understanding of the potential of a systematic,
evidence-based approach to literacy pedagogy for guiding all pupils to acquire the reading and writing abilities needed for
educational success. Data from questionnaires, focus group interviews, and reflective journals were collected and analysed.
Student teachers faced the challenges of apprehending and effectively applying the R2L strategies in classrooms characterised by
pupils’ widely ranging levels of preparation for reading and writing in English. Their reflections show evolution towards
readiness and awareness of the possibilities of adopting proactive measures, such as systematic literacy instruction, in order to
ensure the progress of pupils as they face the challenges of CLIL in the context of socioeconomic and educational inequity within
classrooms and across schools.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Service learning for developing teacher literacy competencies
- 2.1Literacy and its place in education
- 2.2Service Learning for enhancing teacher preparation
- 3.Reading to Learn: Literacy pedagogy for successful school learning
- 4.Methodology
- 4.1Research questions
- 4.2The Service-Learning projects
- 4.3The participants and study design
- 5.Results
- 5.1The ‘low level of English’
- 5.2Attitudes: Self-efficacy and preconceptions about children’s interest in literacy learning
- 5.3Positive outlooks after implementing R2L
- 6.Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
-
References