Abstract:
An educational intervention was planned and conducted at the Universidad Europea in Madrid, within the Dentistry first year degree at the School of Biomedical Sciences starting in 2010. Guided Inquiry Based teaching methodology was implemented within the course Documentation and Introduction to Research Methods, a basic undergraduate science course in a Content and Language Integrated Learning context. Results evidence that students perceive both CLIL and IBL as positive learning experiences. No significant differences were found in terms of gender and valuing CLIL experience but females did find that these methodologies fostered competence development in a higher degree than male students. Vocabulary gains, information management and acquiring linguistic scientific competences were particularly valued. Being allowed to plan and conduct their own research proves to be a positive challenge for students, where creativity and flexibility are valued aspects of the course. Analysis of student written discourse dialogue as they provided feedback on each other’s manuscripts evidences appreciation of Habits of the Mind and linguistic appreciation characteristics of science learners.
IBL and CLIL seem to...