So I've been thinking about this a lot and was wondering if anyone else is (or has) raised a child bilingually.
My mother tongue is English. DH's mother tongue is Swahili, though he also speaks some Masai. Me and DH primary speak Swahili together as I am not quite fluent and I am really pushing to be as well as his English makes him nervous/he's out of practice. At work I would say I speak 90% Swahili/10% English. One of my good friends here who has married a Tanzanian has 4 year old twins and her own and they use One Parent-One Language. Though she knows very little Swahili, her H speaks fluent English and Swahili. I've heard her husband speak to the kids in both languages, they go to an English medium preschool, and they seems to be doing well with both languages but I would say their English is quite a bit stronger.
I'm concerned I will have trouble speaking English to my own child, as all the children I work with I communicate primarily in Swahili. But anyway, is anyone else going to be raising their child bilingually? Any tips or ideas? What method(s) are you planning (or have) to use?
*American in Tanzania, East Africa, since 2013
DH - Tanzanian
Re: Bi-lingual babies?
BFP #1: 7/15/15, SB: 11/14/15
Rainbow baby DS born 9/29/16!!
BFP #3 3/26/18 | Due 12/3/18
If you're thinking about doing it, I say go for it -- the younger you are, the easier it is to learn a language, so if you want your children to be bilingual you might as well start them from birth, and as far as methods go one parent - one language doesn't seem to be too onerous.
Married 7/15
BFP #2 2/18/16
I am following this thread too. I'm Filipina...and speak Filipino fluently, as well as Spanish (which I find super useful living in California). I'd love for our son to grow up speaking 3 languages: English, Spanish and Filipino... but I'm afraid we'll have to choose only 2. I've read that the one parent-one language is effective. Just worried that I won't be able to 100% implement.
BFP #1: 7/15/15, SB: 11/14/15
Rainbow baby DS born 9/29/16!!
BFP #3 3/26/18 | Due 12/3/18
Side note and very random: SO and I were discussing the lack of available daycare for our baby in Jan 2017, and that our baby might have to go to daycare in the ghetto... and we joked that instead of baby signing, our baby will just learn how to sign gang signs.
Wish my baby would speak in a Scottish accent, but I just don't think it's going to happen. Now pronouncing certain words may show his "Scottish", he may learn a bit of the Queen's English versus the Americanized English language and pronunciations.
So, my husband talks to them frequently in 2nd language, and I do as much as I know. They are 4 and 2, and know basic words, numbers, some phrases, Polish folk songs, and prayers. Just keep at it - they'll pick it up fast!
DS#2 due 25 April 2019
LFAF Summer 2016 Awards:
Married: 10/11/15
Baby girl Addie born 10/12/16
Of course his aunts were SUPER thrilled when we started dating because they had already considered me like family from working together, hah.
I have friends here who do one parent-one language. It's common for bilingual kids to have delays in speech relative to monolingual in the early stages, but they even out by school age (or earlier?) so if I could I definitely would!
I guess my son is learning two dialects of English though- British and American. He knows that in the USA he had to say "excuse me" while in the UK he has to say "sorry" and things like that. Plus he has an English accent so there's that
I would love to teach the little one a third language since he is still little and may be able grasp it better. I just am not sure what language and/ or how to start considering I don't speak a third language.
We used Baby Signing Time and Signing Time. We also watch Rachel and the TreeSchoolers. I really need to buy stock in Two Little Hands Productions!
BFP #1: 7/15/15, SB: 11/14/15
Rainbow baby DS born 9/29/16!!
BFP #3 3/26/18 | Due 12/3/18
That's so awesome! What area of Germany do you live? My husbands family lives in the Black Forest and so they speak kind of an odd dialect that makes his worried that if he doesn't teach the baby, they'll go to German school and learn it formally and still not be able to communicate very well with their cousins.
DS#2 due 25 April 2019