Moving Beyond the Classroom: Translanguaging and Trans-semiotising in Dutch CLIL Classes
Summary
Following the abolishment of nationally-enforced monolingual policies for Dutch bilingual
education, schools are faced with designing their own rules regarding language use in the
classroom (Oattes, 2021). In this light, the present study empirically uncovers the current
communicative practises of teachers and students in secondary education CLIL classes from
the theoretical lens of translanguaging and trans-semiotising. The data (i.e., audio recordings
and observation notes) were gathered from biology, geography, history, and physics CLIL
lessons in a third year of a certified senior bilingual school in the Netherlands. The findings
indicate that teachers use translanguaging and trans-semiotising practises to scaffold content
in their lessons. Where subjects in the natural sciences more frequently relied on physical
demonstrations, subjects in the social sciences employed temporal methods of scaffolding.
The results regarding students’ translanguaging and trans-semiotising suggest that students
use these communicative practises to express their identities and roles, and to incorporate
humour in the classroom. The current paper concludes by proposing that the implementation
of these practises in the classroom might help foster an inclusive environment in which both
teachers and students feel validated.