Ladies, for those of you who speak another language fluently or have another language as your first language. Are you planning on teaching your child that language? I bought a bunch of books and plan to read to my boy. DH at times is afraid that we will have a secret language
Re: Multiple languages in the family
I can't wait to meet you Neva Margaret Rebecca
I can't wait to meet you Neva Margaret Rebecca
It will be interesting to see how LO adjusts but my three nephews were raised the same and they are all doing great. You'd be amazed at how quickly kids learn languages. When he was three, we put my nephew into a daycare that had a teacher who apparently spoke spanish to the kids (we didnt know at the time), within a few weeks, my nephew was talking back to us in Spanish and we were totally bewildered. Kids are amazing!
I always joke to DH that once LO starts speaking Russian, he's going to have to learn it as well! Maybe you can take that stance! 8-}
The other LO in our nanny share just turned 2 and is speaking English, German and Spanish (her dad is German, mom's family from Puerto Rico). The one thing I will warn you of is that she was slightly delayed in her speech because there were three languages being thrown at her...but she's over the hump now, and she already knows to talk to me in English, her Dad in German etc...it's awesome.
At one point I spoke fluent Japanese, but after 10 years of lack of use have lost most of it (though I can still understand when people talk to me, I can't respond). If only I had kept it up, it would have been so cool for my kids
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DS1 born 08.02.11
DS2 born 12.05.13
We are a Russian-speaking household. Before we had kids DH and I were speaking a mix of Russian and English but once DS1 was born we committed to only speaking Russian in front of them. And were able to carry that through. They also had Russian-speaking nannies until they started daycare shortly before turning 2. They picked up English in daycare and DS1 is now fully bilingual (DS2 has only been in daycare 4 months so his English is not as fluent yet). The "hardest" part was getting used to speaking Russian to the kids at public places - but if we're at the playground I just explain to other moms that we're doing that for consistency and noone ever thought it was rude.
Good friends of mine are doing OPOL (one-person one-language) where the mom (and her family) speak Russian and the dad (and his family via Skype) speak Bulgarian. And she is getting English at daycare. Of course the language that gets the most use will be most fluent but she understands all three very well.
I HIGHLY recommend this book. It dispels a lot of the myths about bilingual children (that they get confused, are slow talkers, etc.). It also has a lot of great example of different set-ups which can work: OPOL, one language in house, immersion schools... Also lots of tricks and resources. And, you guys know I'm a nerd so I love that the authors cite a lot of studies done in the language labs
If you don't want to read the book the main lesson is that you just need commitment and consistency. It won't just happen on its own. I see that with my nieces - they started speaking to their parents in English and the parents started to respond in English because without even noticing it and now they are teens and their Russian very poor.
Married 10-20-12 | First Baby Due 1-22-14 | Team PINK | Me (29) Hubby (33)
January 2014 | December Siggy Challenge | Favorite Christmas Movie: "It Nearly Wasn't Christmas"
I too worry about being left out
I'll teach baby both Irish & French Just some basics. Looking forward to the challenge and seeing how they pick it up.
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My Mom is also fluent in French (her dad can barely speak English), and if she becomes the daycare provider (which I'm hoping she will), I'm going to ask if she could speak to him in French during the day as well.
It opens up so many doors for people as they get older so I'd love LO to be bilingual (especially French as we live in Canada).
My sons started at daycare without any English around age 2 but we have had other kids who joined DS1's preschool groups at 3 and 4 without speaking any English and they have adjusted within weeks and were speaking within months. So don't stress too much about having to introduce English at home.
I just asked my husband's aunt the other day how she did it (her husband only understands French now because of the family he married into but still can't speak it) and her two daughters are EXTREMELY french.
She spoke to the kids in French growing up and he spoke to them in English. They always went to French schools. I plan on doing the same in my house. DH will speak French, me in English (some French as well but want to make sure they don't learn "bad" French). His family will speak to him in French, mine in English and he will attend full French school in a French town close to where we live.
BFP May 2011 - MMC July 2011 / BFP MAY 2013 - Due Feb 1st!! / Married Aug 24, 2013 /ME & DH both 30