CLIL at the linguistic interfaces
Journal of Immersion and Content-Based Language Education 6(1) : 85-112 (2018)
Abstract
!is study explores the e"ect of CLIL on the acquisition of nominal
morphology (syntax-morphology interface) and article use (syntax-semanticsdiscourse-
interface), linguistic areas that have been scarcely investigated in
CLIL settings. Here we compare article omission and overuse errors in an oral
production task performed by L1 Basque-Spanish learners of L3 English in
two CLIL and non-CLIL groups matching in age at testing time and amount
of exposure. Results indicate that as regards nominal morphology, CLIL and
non-CLIL learners are equal in terms of the omission of the de#nite and the
inde#nite article, but CLIL learners learn to solve article overuse more quickly
than non-CLIL learners. Taking together these results and the #ndings from our
previous study (Martínez-Adrián & Gutiérrez-Mangado, 2015a), which revealed
the non-existence of CLIL bene#ts with respect to the acquisition of verbal
morphology, we conclude that while the syntax-morphology interface seems
to be una"ected by CLIL, CLIL can aid in the acquisition of features from the
syntax-semantics-discourse interface.