Read the text and answer question.
A new age has dawned in additional language teaching
methodology which directly reflects wider changes in the
world. In the corresponding sea-change in educational
philosophy, Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL)
presents an opportunity and a threat to accepted language
teaching practice. As with immersion, formal language
instruction remains integral to most CLIL models. But for this
to be synchronous to subject teaching through an additional
language, curricular and methodological adjustment is often
required.
The ways in which content and language are integrated
influence decision-making on how each is handled within the
model. For example, this may be through language-learning
preparation before the CLIL course, language learning
embedded in the CLIL course, or language learning parallel
to the CLIL course.
A useful starting point is to consider the content of
learning. The concept of what constitutes content in a CLIL
context is much more flexible than selecting a discipline from
a traditional school curriculum such as geography, music,
biology or physics. Whilst curricular subjects such as these
might be appropriate for some CLIL programmes, contextual
variables such as teacher availability, language support,
age of learners and the social demands of the learning
environment may mean that a different choice of content is
more appropriate. In other words: what exactly is meant by
‘content’ in CLIL will depend on the context of the learning
institution.
However, the crucial point here is that, no matter whether
issues concerning the content or the language are more
dominant at a given point, neither must be subsumed or the
interrelationship between the two ignored.
(COYLE, Do; HOOD, Philip; MARSH, David. 2010. Adaptado)