Masterarbeit, 2012
90 Seiten, Note: A
1 INTRODUCTION
2 IMMERSION EDUCATION
2.1 BACKGROUND AND DEFINITIONS
2.1.1 CLIL VERSUS IMMERSION
2.1.2 ORIGINS OF IMMERSION PROGRAMMES IN CANADA
2.1.3 TYPES OF IMMERSION
2.1.4 THE SPREAD OF IMMERSION INTO SWITZERLAND
2.2 APPROACHES TO TEACHING IN IMMERSION SETTINGS
2.2.1 CORE FEATURES OF IMMERSION
2.2.2 RESEARCH IN SUPPORT OF IMMERSION
2.3 CHALLENGES OF IMMERSION TEACHING
2.3.1 SHORTCOMINGS IN STUDENTS' PRODUCTIVE SKILLS
2.3.2 LACK OF IMMERSION TEACHERS
2.3.3 IMMERSION TEACHER TRAINING
2.3.4 LANGUAGE REQUIREMENTS FOR IMMERSION TEACHERS
2.3.5 LANGUAGE DEMANDS OF ENGLISH IMMERSION TEACHING IN SWITZERLAND
2.4 SUMMARY
3 DESIGN OF THE STUDY
3.1 METHODS AND METHODOLOGY
3.1.1 QUALITATIVE ACTION RESEARCH
3.1.2 LESSON OBSERVATIONS
3.1.3 SEMI-STRUCTURED INTERVIEWS
3.2 PURPOSIVE SAMPLING
3.2.1 SELECTION OF PARTICIPANTS
3.2.2 SUMMARY OF PARTICIPANTS
3.3 DATA COLLECTION
3.3.1 PREPARATION
3.3.2 LESSON OBSERVATIONS
3.3.3 SEMI-STRUCTURED INTERVIEWS
3.4 DATA ANALYSIS
3.4.1 LESSON OBSERVATIONS
3.4.2 SEMI-STRUCTURED INTERVIEWS
4 FINDINGS
4.1 LESSON OBSERVATIONS
4.2 SEMI-STRUCTURED INTERVIEWS
4.2.1 LANGUAGE EXPERIENCE
4.2.2 OBSERVED LESSON
4.2.3 LANGUAGE REQUIREMENTS FOR TEACHING IMMERSIVELY
4.2.4 LANGUAGE SUPPORT TOWARDS THE START OF THE PROGRAMME
4.2.5 PRESENT DAY SUPPORT AND TRAINING
4.2.6 CURRENT LANGUAGE DEMANDS
4.2.7 RECOMMENDATIONS
5 DISCUSSION
5.1 LANGUAGE EXPERIENCE AND TRAINING PRE-IMMERSION
5.2 OBSERVED LESSONS
5.3 LANGUAGE REQUIREMENTS, CONCERNS AND SUPPORT
5.3.1 REQUIREMENTS
5.3.2 CONCERNS
5.3.3 SUPPORT
5.4 TEACHER RECOMMENDATIONS
5.5 RESEARCH QUESTIONS
5.6 TRUSTWORTHINESS AND LIMITATIONS OF DATA
5.7 SUGGESTIONS FOR FURTHER STUDY
6 CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
This dissertation investigates the language demands placed on teachers within English immersion programmes in German-speaking Switzerland. The primary goal is to determine how current language needs are being addressed, identify specific language challenges encountered by teachers, and propose effective strategies to improve the language proficiency of future immersion educators.
1 INTRODUCTION
Strategically placed at the heart of Europe and with four national languages of its own, Switzerland has an impressive history of learning other languages. However, only after World War II did the importance of English in Switzerland start to increase as a result of it becoming widely used for:
international communication in business, finance, science and technology, international relations, diplomacy and military missions, higher education and research, sport, design and fashion, all forms of mass media, the entertainment industry, and travel and tourism. (Mackenzie 2009: 223)
In turn, the global spread and commodification of English has not gone unnoticed by the Swiss educational authorities who introduced an English immersion programme in 2001 comprising content-based learning at Swiss upper secondary schools. According to Jansen (2007: 13):
[i]mmersion lessons are lessons in which English is not taught as a subject in its own right but where English is used solely as a medium to deliver the subject. The main focus lies on the teaching of the subject competence and not the language competence; the lessons are orientated towards meeting the learning goals of the subject, which is partially taught and developed through English. (My translation)
1 INTRODUCTION: This chapter provides the context for the study, outlining the rise of English in Switzerland and the subsequent implementation of immersion programmes, while defining the research motivation and structure.
2 IMMERSION EDUCATION: This section reviews relevant literature on immersion pedagogy, its history in Canada and Switzerland, core characteristics, and the inherent challenges regarding teacher training and linguistic requirements.
3 DESIGN OF THE STUDY: This chapter details the qualitative action research methodology, including the selection of eight teachers, the process of lesson observations, and the use of semi-structured interviews for data collection.
4 FINDINGS: This section presents the empirical data gathered from the research, focusing on teachers' personal experiences, language requirements, training efficacy, and the actual language demands faced in the classroom.
5 DISCUSSION: This chapter critically analyses the findings in relation to the research questions, reflecting on the current state of language support and the professional realities for teachers in the programme.
6 CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS: This final chapter synthesises the research insights and provides actionable recommendations for educational authorities, such as the introduction of structured evaluations and enhanced teacher support systems.
English immersion, Switzerland, CLIL, teacher language demands, language proficiency, action research, subject-specific English, classroom English, immersion teacher training, educational authorities, pedagogical support, language guidelines, teacher professionalism, linguistic challenge, quality assurance.
This work examines the language demands placed on teachers working in English immersion programmes within the upper secondary school system in German-speaking Switzerland.
The research explores the intersection of content-based instruction and the language proficiency required by teachers, focusing on their experiences, existing training, and the support systems available to them.
The study primarily asks how the language needs of English immersion teachers are being met, what challenges they face in the classroom, and how future teachers can be better prepared.
The author employs a qualitative action research approach, utilising lesson observations and semi-structured interviews with eight selected immersion teachers from four different schools.
The main section documents the findings from interviews and observations, covering topics such as pre-immersion training, current language demands, teacher concerns, and the adequacy of institutional guidelines.
Key terms include English immersion, teacher language proficiency, qualitative action research, Swiss secondary education, and pedagogical support structures.
Often, teachers are recruited from existing subject-specialist pools; while some may hold a Cambridge Proficiency Exam (CPE) certificate, many rely on subject expertise and "learning by doing" with limited initial language-specific training.
Teachers strongly recommend more structured language support, such as having access to English assistants for feedback, dedicated time for language immersion, and the adoption of an immersion-specific placement evaluation rather than generic proficiency exams.
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