My husband and I have different first languages and would like our child to speak both. Mine is English and his is Spanish, but we both speak both. Does anyone have any experience raising a bilingual child? I've read a lot and some people say that each parent should only use their first language all the time with the child. Some other research suggests using the 'foreign' language (Spanish for us since we live in the US) in the home all the time and then English when we are out of the house. Anyone with advice? Thanks!
Re: Raising a bilingual child
hope that helps
Thanks for the information, @LiveNLove44, really appreciate that
You'll get very jumbled sentences, too. I saw it a lot working with Pre-K bilingual kids. If they don't know or can't remember a word, they'll mix in a "substitute" from the other language. Makes it difficult for monolingual caregivers.
In the end, it's worth it. Its much easier to have a native accent and more natural sentence structure when they learn very young. Its amazing what our brains can do.
I can see that becoming an issue with our kids though, since DH doesnt speak dutch, but eh, he'll either learn or be talked about by us right in front of him
I know it's far off for education but I would also look into the schools in your area and see if any are dual immersion schools. We have quite a few in our area because California has a very large Spanish speaking population. If you aren't familiar with dual immersion, the students are taught in both Spanish and English. Some schools are different on how they go about this but a school I used to work in was 50/50 on English and Spanish instruction. Might be something you're interested in if it's available in your area
My two girls Flower and Ayla Faye
Dual langue schools typically offer a good program, just make sure the school is well rounded and not focusing only on language.
It was good to read that it can make progression a little slower to start. Friends of mine have struggled with this.