“…This feature is found not only in studies between -2010(e.g., Pistorio 2009) but also in more recent studies (e.g., Keogh, 2017), which may signal that while European CLIL has narrowed down the scope of CLIL to learning content through an L2 (Ball et al, 2015), Latin American CLIL gravitates between the language-driven and, to a lesser extent, content-driven approaches. Upon scrutiny of the focus of each publication, we identified 37 studies which explore CLIL as a language-driven approach for teaching English as a foreign language (e.g., Czischke Alvarez, 2013), and 20 studies which examine CLIL implementation for the teaching of content such as history (e.g., Lara Herrera, 2015;Ravelo, 2013), science (e.g., Gamero-Calderón, 2017, Garzón-Díaz, 2018Leal, 2016), geography (e.g., Costa-Rau, 2016), math (e.g., Corzo Zambrano & Robles Noriega, 2011), first aid (e.g., Finardi, Silveira, & Alencar, 2016, business (e.g., Gardner, 2009) or ELT methodologies (e.g., De la Barra et al, 2018).…”