Abstract

This article is a literature review with the objective of characterizing bilingual physical education, to then present and discuss the biggest challenge of the discipline, which is to keep the balance between the objectives and demands of physical education along with the process of acquiring a new language, and then create concepts for how to achieve this balance. This balance proposed for the discipline is something complex and at the same time subtle, we analyzed a specific article that seeks to concentrate all the difficulties of bilingual physical education in two dilemmas, and based on this analysis, the concept of the "three pillars of bilingual physical education" is proposed. The concept of the three pillars represents, in an integral and objective way, all the demands that the teacher needs to take into consideration to teach an ideal bilingual physical education class. The first pillar represents physical education, and all its demands. The second pillar is the process of acquiring a new language. Finally, the third pillar represents the optimization of time that the teacher needs to make to adapt the new demands within the classes, where with these pillars the most common mistakes that happen in the search for an efficient bilingual physical education were presented. It was concluded that to achieve an efficient bilingual physical education there is a need to balance the objectives of physical education mixed with the acquisition process of a new language, through the concept of the three pillars.

Highlights

  • GarcíaCalvo (2019) continues that the teacher needs this flexibility in the use of the first language, especially for younger students, and he concludes that it is necessary to create parameters so that students are not dependent on translations or the first language during bilingual physical education classes

  • Its necessary to initially define what type of bilingual education we are going to address, since bilingual education can address several topics, such as bilingual education for the deaf-mute, bilingual education for indigenous peoples, among others.in this publication, bilingual education will be addressed within the perspective of acquiring a new language incorporated within the mandatory requirements of a bilingual curriculum.In this modality, the student attends school full time, and the acquisition of a new language occurs through a greater focus on learning this new pre-selected language1

  • Imbalance in the language acquisition process. This imbalance occurs when the teacher focuses on the 2nd pillar and the 3rd pillar, but not on the 1st pillar. This situation happens when the teacher has an exaggerated focus on the process of acquiring a new language, causing the objectives, activities, and directions of physical education not to be contemplated by the lack of time, reducing the bilingual physical education class to a class of acquisition of a new language, with physical activities out of context of the objectives of physical education

Read more

Summary

Introduction

GarcíaCalvo (2019) continues that the teacher needs this flexibility in the use of the first language, especially for younger students, and he concludes that it is necessary to create parameters so that students are not dependent on translations or the first language during bilingual physical education classes. Coral & Lleixà (2014) cite that the goals of physical education, within the CLIL methodology, are balanced, when motor content, language, cognitive development, and social and/or societal development have a similar degree of demand during lessons.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.