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 The Gift of Language Learning For the Families of Today  
We live in an increasingly global society. We realize as adults how difficult it is to learn a new language, but we keep reading that childhood is the perfect time to begin. Prepare your child now for our global society and a very diverse future.

By Beth Butler

We live in an increasingly global society - in which our neighbor might be from Ecuador, our colleague from France, and the person who teaches our child from Sweden! We realize as adults how difficult it is to learn a new language, but we keep reading that childhood is the perfect time to begin language learning.

Time and Newsweek ran feature articles years ago about the window of opportunity for second language learning being somewhere between birth and ten years old. It is so true, and yet so many parents continue to insist on English only for the first years of life. It is all a matter of educating the parents of today, helping them to realize that a growing number of brain studies indicate that young children learn languages easily and retain them longer if they are exposed to new languages early in life. Experts agree that while a baby is learning one word for an item, it is just as easy for his young brain to learn a second word for the same item.

Tell a new mom about the studies out of York University showing that children who received instruction in two languages scored twice as high on language tests than their monolingual peers, and that new mom will look at you with amazement. Then go on to inform this mom that these bilingual children also read sooner and demonstrate advanced problem solving capabilities. (Dr. Ellen Bialystok, 2001)

I recall sharing with a mom who had two preschool age children the fact that children learning through a bilingual format will outperform their monolingual peers in grade school as they experience advanced cognitive development. She could not keep her disbelief hidden as I then went on to share with her the fact that the added benefit of learning a second language before middle school is that her children will speak the new languages with native or near-native pronunciation.

We have witnessed through the programs on television for children how quickly they pick up a new language as they yell at the TV set with their newfound words! We watch as our children learn new things so quickly between the ages of birth and five, acting like little sponges and soaking up everything in their environment.

Why then should we not think that a new language could be next on the list of important things to bring into the life of a child? Give this gift early enough, and your child will read sooner, score higher on standardized tests, and have better opportunities in life. With many linguists, educators, and experts agreeing that sooner is better, begin the bilingual fun now!

By six months of age, a baby has the ability to learn all of the hundreds of languages of our world. Around eleven months of age, the brain begins to specialize and, as we all can vouch for, it becomes increasingly difficult to pick up a new language year after year. Up until the age of five, a child still has the ability to learn five languages simultaneously.

By middle school, learning a new language is no longer as easy as it used to be in elementary school. Children whose brains have been wired to learn languages early in life will experience advanced success in learning any language of their choice later in life.

Finding a fun and easy way to bring the language learning into your daily routine is often the challenge. Many a new mom tells me that she has no time to add an extra class to attend with her children. The key can then be to find multimedia products that use a bilingual format for introducing language to children.

Find CDs for the car and DVDs that incorporate all of the senses and many of the learning styles. Experts agree that the two languages should be presented in a bilingual format, because as your child is still acquiring skills in his native language, the new language should be presented in a seamless bilingual format alongside his native language. This allows for better retention, higher self-esteem, and fun for the entire family.

Give the gift of a second language journey that is easy and fun for you and your child. Sing, dance, and play together as you enjoy learning each new word on the path to becoming bilingual. Prepare your child for successful travel through our very global society and what is sure to be a very diverse future.

About the Author:

Beth Butler is the founder of the BOCA BETH Program for young children. Gather your child onto your lap, and take a peek at her fun Spanish and English movies or shake your feet to a bilingual beat for FREE at http://www.bocabeth.com. Article Source: A Language Guide - http://www.a-language-guide.com


  Article added 11/28/07.

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