@misc{10818/33262, year = {2017}, url = {http://hdl.handle.net/10818/33262}, abstract = {In recent years, the issue of using bilingual education has come to the public’s attention. A widespread belief is that students in bilingual classes achieve a higher competence in the language (Bredenbröker, 2000), but that they lag behind in subject-specific knowledge when compared to fellow students in traditional (i.e. monolingual) classroom settings (Hajer, 2000; Marsh, Hau, & Kong, 2000). Nevertheless, by evaluating knowledge gain in a short teaching unit, previous studies have shown that bilingual students rarely experience drawbacks (Osterhage, 2007; Zydatiß, 2007; Koch & Bünder, 2008). Although there are a variety of different opinions, the present study aims at detecting how subject-specific knowledge is influenced by bilingual biology lessons. The study was conducted at a grammar school in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, with 13 and 14 year old students. To assess differences in students’ knowledge gain, test and control groups were used, in which students were taught 12 identical biology lessons in a bilingual and a traditional classroom. The unit consisted of basic characteristics seen in (social) insects. Both classes took a knowledge test before and after the unit. We hypothesised that there would be a higher increase in knowledge for the bilingual class compared to the monolingual class. Results suggested a slightly higher knowledge gain in bilingual students, however no significant differences were revealed.}, title = {Measuring the Knowledge Increase of Eight Grade Students in a Bilingual Biology Unit}, title = {Midiendo el incremento del aprendizaje de estudiantes de octavo grado en una unidad de biología bilingüe}, doi = {10.5294/laclil.2017.10.2.2}, author = {Ohlberger, Stephanie and Wegner, Claas}, }