Thursday, June 14, 2007

Give the Gift of Languages

Directions: Read and print out this article. Answer all of the questions that follow by commenting or by bringing them to class. Also, be sure to know the bold words!

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Give the Gift of Languages
by Beth Butler


We live in an increasingly global society – our neighbor is from Puerto Rico, our co-worker from South Africa, and our child's teacher from Sweden! As adults, we often feel it's too difficult to learn a new language, but for kids, it's easy.

Time and Newsweek ran feature articles on the window of opportunity for second language learning – reported to be between birth and 10 years old. And a growing number of brain studies concur. The truth is, young children learn languages easily and retain them longer if they are exposed to them early in life. That's because when a baby is learning one word for an item, it's just as easy for his young brain to learn a second word for the same item. It grows more difficult as he gets older.

Being bilingual gives advantages beyond the joy of conversing in more than one tongue. A study by Dr. Ellen Bialystok of York University showed that children who received instruction in two languages scored twice as high on language tests than their monolingual peers. These bilingual children also read sooner and demonstrated advanced problem solving capabilities.

Latest research suggests that children learning through a bilingual format will outperform their monolingual peers in grade school as they experience advanced cognitive development. And the added benefit of learning a second language before middle school? These children will speak the new languages with native or near-native pronunciation.

The sooner you get kids started, the better. Believe it or not, at six months old a baby has the ability to learn all the languages of our world at the same time. Up until the age of five, a child still has the ability to learn five languages simultaneously. By middle school we all know 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.

Find a fun way to bring the language learning into your family's daily routine. Sing, dance, and play together on the road to becoming bilingual. We live in an increasingly global society. There is no better gift you can give your child than the ability to explore that world, speaking seamlessly.

Beth Butler is the creator of the BOCA BETH Language Learning Series for young children. www.bocabeth.com

http://www.education.com/magazine/article/Ed_Give_Gift_Languages_2/

Questions to answer:

1. What does the phrase "window of opportunity" mean? Why do you think the word "window" is in that? Do you know of other common phrases/sayings that use the word "opportunity" or "window"?

2. Define "tongue" as it is used in the article.

3. What does the phrase "believe it or not" suggest/imply?

4. What does it mean for children's brains to be "wired" to learn languages?

5. In the phrase "on the road to becoming bilingual," is "road" literal or figurative? How do you know?

6. What does it mean to speak "seamlessly"? What is a "seam"?

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

[1]window of opportunity - the time that can have a chance to do sth
::window:: a period of time regarded as highly favorable for initiating or completing something
>>>http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/window
>>>the 6th definition
- cuz in the article describe w/ the lenge of time after --
- so it's reply to 'between birth & 10 years old'

[2]tongue - language ^_^

[3]believe it or not - the information that hard to believe but it's really happen already

[4]wire to learn languages - exposed to learn
::wire:: to connect
>>>http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/wire
>>>the 27th definition

[5]on the road [idiom]:: started
>>>http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/on%20the%20road
>>>the 11th-c definition
- it's a figurative cuz it's an idiom

[6]speak seamlessly - to speak well
::seamlessly:: smoothly continuous or uniform in quality
::seam:: to become cracked, or fissured
>>>http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/seam
>>>the 10th definition