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When infants are born, they can distinguish
differences among sounds representative of all languages.
They are ready to learn any language they hear. However, by
the age of six months they begin to specialize in their home
language. Research shows that a child’s early experiences
with language help determine which brain connections develop
and which are "pruned away." How children learn
a second language and the value of being bilingual is often
misunderstood or overlooked.
Throughout children’s early development there are critical
and/or sensitive periods in learning certain skills often
described as "Windows of Opportunity."The child’s
brain is very different from an adult brain—a very dynamic
structure that is continually evolving. A two year old child
has twice as many synapses as an adult. This young brain must
use the connections or they are simply lost as the brain matures.
The power to learn language is so great in a young child that
they are able to learn many spoken languages. Early childhood
is a great window of opportunity for children to learn a second
or even a third language in. Their brain is simply pre-programmed
to develop language! |
References:
Learning Languages Boosts Brain Power; BBC
News; October 2004.
Reading into Brain Development; Satkofsky,
Amy; March 2005.
Second Language Learning; Phillips, Melissa
Lee; Neuroscience for Kids August 2002.
The Rosenberg Report: Raising bilingual children;
Rosenberg, Marsha; June 1996. |
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Today more than ever many more families speak
more than one language in the home. Raising children to be
successful in more than one language requires intentional
planning and some information about bilingual language development.
Families need to consider how their children will develop
two languages, clarify their own definition of bilingualism
(defined in terms of listening, speaking, reading and writing),
and plan for opportunities for learning language.
There are two types of childhood bilingualism that have been
defined: simultaneous learning of two languages and sequential
bilingualism.
Simultaneous language learning happens when children learn
two languages concurrently. This model can happen when a child’s
parents speak different languages and/or one language is spoken
in the home and another language is spoken at school. Support
for simultaneous language learning is important to assist
children in language goals and usage. Some examples of how
this can happen are:
- Each parent consistently speaks one language, while the
other parent (or family member) speaks another language.
- Both parents speak one language in the home and a second
language is used at school.
- One language is used in the home and school, and the second
language is used in the community.
- Both parents speak both languages to the child but separate
the languages according to speaking situations or on alternate
days.
Simultaneous learning tends to be affected by four key factors:
- The parents’ ability in one or more languages.
Some parents speak only one language, the language of the
home, and are not able to speak the language of the school
or of the community.
- The parents’ actual use of the language with the
child. The parents may have the language ability in two
or more languages, but have made a decision about which
language they speak with the child.
- The language or languages other family members speak with
the child, such as the language spoken between children
and extended family or between siblings.
- The language the child uses in the community.
Sequential bilingualism occurs when a child has established
one language before learning a second. The age of three years
usually separates simultaneous and sequential language learning
when language is learned more formally through a school or
class process.
Consistency is also a key in early language learning. Rich
language experiences in both languages are essential for good
bilingual development. The quality of the language interaction
is also very important. The language used should be developmentally
appropriate and should include encouragement and approval
along with opportunities to expand the language. Strategies
to expand language include language models [who both listen
to and converse with the child], print material in language,
and music with lyrics in the language.
Each child learns language as his/her own rate. Some factors
influencing this rate may be:
- Stability and mobility. A family that remains in the second
language community for a longer period of time will increase
the chances of the child retaining the second language.
- Relationships within the family. For example if the mother
and father speak different languages, but one parent is
often away from the family, the child will have a more difficult
time learning the language of the absent parent.
- Attitudes towards each language expressed by the parents,
other family members, the school, the community and especially
the child. All of these factors can affect the development
of one or both languages. Both languages, if given importance
and sense of worth in all aspects of the child’s life
will support language development in both languages. All
children have a need and desire to communicate when language
experiences are positive and meaningful.
Knowing two or more languages truly gives children many advantages
in life. Bilingual children have the advantage of knowing
two cultures, of being able to communicate with a wider variety
of people, and of possible economic advantages in their future
(examples may include: more opportunity for jobs, requirement/preference
of employers for bilingual employees, the global economy provides
more opportunity for those that can interface with more facets
of the market, etc.). Research has even shown advantages in
cognitive skills among bilingual individuals.
It
is shown that being bilingual produces changes in the anatomy
of the brain. Brain scans have actually revealed the density
of the grey matter is greater in bilinguals than in those
without a second language. Researchers have found that people
who speak two languages have more grey matter (grey matter
in the brain is made up of neurons, or brain cells) in the
language region of the brain. The earlier they learned the
language, the larger the grey area. “The grey matter
in this region increases in bilinguals relative to monolinguals
-- this is particularly true in early bilinguals who learned
a second language early in life,” said Andrea Mechelli,
a neuroscientist at University College London.
Becoming bilingual is a special gift parents can offer their
children! Bilingualism can help to support, develop and maintain
and enhance a child’s self identity, self-esteem, schooling
options and other social factors. Above all, the child remains
connected to the family and to the community. |