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5 answers

Several possibilities.

1) If you are in a traditional two-parent family, you can try the one-parent, one-language technique. One parent speaks exclusively English around the children, and the other the native tongue. You write English well, so perhaps you'd be the natural choice to be the English-speaker. Assuming you are selected as the English speaker, you must never use your native language when speaking to the children or your spouse when s/he is around the children, though of course you should feel free to use it conversing with anyone else. Likewise, your spouse only uses your native language when speaking to the children or to you when you are around the children. The one parent one language technique has been proven by many linguistic studies to be the most effectively of all methods to acquire two languages at equal dominance/strength.

2) Hiring a nanny, governess, babysitter, or other day-care provider who speaks English as a first language. This person would of course not use your native language around the children.

3) Provide access to English telly, DVDs, books, and other media. Read to the children every night from an English picture book. Always use the English subtitle feature on your television (yes, it's there for the hard-of-hearing, but you can use it for language acquisition as well) and your DVDs.

4) Use your child's natural interests and curiosity to your advantage. If s/he's into dinosaurs, get English children's books with loads of T Rex pictures. If it's superheros, get English language comic books. Follow their lead, and they'll never realize that they're learning.

2006-10-21 23:31:37 · answer #1 · answered by lizzit 3 · 0 0

With all due respect, isnt your 3 year old son a bit too young to learn a second language? I myself speak Urdu and English but am much better in the latter due to almost non-existent exposure to Urdu when I was a kid. I'd recommend letting him get fluent in one language then introducing the other to him. Not being good in English is understandable but your son will be socially affected if people mock his Urdu, the mothertongue.
Or you could try the balancing act and see that he gets equal exposure to both. Your call, really.

2006-10-22 00:04:08 · answer #2 · answered by Komal W 1 · 0 0

You must talk each languages for your son. As the announcing is going; probably the most problematic language you'll be able to ever study is your moment one. So why now not pass that altogether, and study 2 languages from the begin? Once a youngster has already mastered or is actively utilising one language, including a different language to the combo is distinctive than studying each languages concurrently from start. There are many factors for identifying to show a youngster to a overseas language after infancy; relocating to a different nation; taking the possibility of a overseas talking child sitter; or perhaps you simply did not consider approximately elevating your first youngster multilingually however desire to take action together with your moment (which offers your first youngster the possibility to study even as you train your new child.) Whatever the motive, the earlier you start, the bigger. As a reference, situated on guest registration in this internet website online, we see naturally that the older the youngster, the fewer most likely they'll begin studying a brand new language.

2016-09-01 00:47:19 · answer #3 · answered by rentschler 4 · 0 0

my parents spoke 2 languages from the time i was born, so i learnt 2 languages before i even started school.

i learnt urdu (my third language), when i was 27! but it was very difficult since i had watched hindi movies (without subtitles) for most of my life.

so, i would suggest that you start speaking english to ur children as well as urdu.

2006-10-22 21:54:50 · answer #4 · answered by marmalade 4 · 0 0

www.eslmonkeys.com . this is a wondersul site for english learning

2006-10-21 23:44:25 · answer #5 · answered by Alen 4 · 0 0

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