Question on bilingual language acquisition from non-native speaker
Shari Berkowitz
shariellen at nyc.rr.com
Wed Dec 10 13:29:38 UTC 2008
There is a group in New York whose members are speaking Irish with their
children, despite the parents being non-native speakers. There was a short
talk on this:
http://web.gc.cuny.edu/dept/lingu/rislus/events/RISLUSForum2006.html
See Thomas Ihde at 11:35. Perhaps he has published something since then?
Shari Berkowitz
doctoral candidate
Speech-Language-Hearing
CUNY GC
-----Original Message-----
From: info-childes at googlegroups.com [mailto:info-childes at googlegroups.com]
On Behalf Of Aliyah MORGENSTERN
Sent: Wednesday, December 10, 2008 8:17 AM
To: info-childes at googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Question on bilingual language acquisition from non-native
speaker
Dear Kristin,
I'm not sure the answer to your question is simple. There could be so
many different situations... It is great to be bilingual and even
better to be multilingual, it does not make you more "intelligent",
some kids do perform better in certain tasks but each kid is different
and noone has proved that bilingual people are MORE intelligent
whatever that means.
All in all, the parents have to be feel really comfortable with the
language and have to picture themselves speaking to their children in
another language than what their own parents spoke to them and decide
whether THAT is "doable" for them and if they want it. They might also
want to try to project themselves in situations when they will have to
argue with their teen-age kid or comfort her/him or discuss all kinds
of issues... So it's a very personal decision I would say.
On the practical side, if that choice is made, I really think it will
only work out if the community or part of the community speaks the
chosen language as well and even better if the kid gets a lot of that
language in school...
My best
Aliyah MORGENSTERN
Unviersité Sorbonne Nouvelle-Paris 3
Le 10 déc. 08 à 12:49, annalee harley a écrit :
> hi,
>
> Studies have shown that bilingual learners end up alot smarter than
> there peers, they use neural pathways unknown to the monolingual
> child. I think You are very lucky to have high proficiancy in
> another language, so why not teach it to your child.
>
> yours annalee.
>
> > Date: Wed, 10 Dec 2008 03:04:52 -0800
> > Subject: Question on bilingual language acquisition from non-
> native speaker
> > From: kristinborjesson at yahoo.de
> > To: info-childes at googlegroups.com
> >
> >
> > Dear All,
> >
> > I'm not entirely sure whether this is the right place to pose my
> > question. However, a friend of mine suggested I'd try here to get
> some
> > information on the following issue.
> >
> > I'd like to know whether there are any studies investigating the
> > question of whether or not a non-native speaker of a language (with
> > fairly high competency) should try and raise his child bilingually
> > nevertheless. I'm simply interested in views on that question.
> >
> > I'd be very happy if you could help me with suggestions or
> references
> > on this.
> >
> > Thanks a lot.
> >
> > Best,
> > Kristin
> >
> >
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