Definitely. As an ESL teacher and a K-12 student teacher, I would advise ALL immigrant parents to continue speaking L1 at home, and to actively TEACH their child L1 (not just expose them to it). At the same time, parents have to realize that any student who speaks E as a SL will be at an academic disadvantage within the school system. For this reason, parents of all ESL students should encourage their students to attend ESL classes, even when they think their kids have grasped English. The truth is, ESL students who successfully graduate from high school do so with a vocabulary of less half the size of an English-speaking student. That's not a lot of words (about 40,000 compared to upwards of 100,000), and keeping kids in STRUCTURED ESL lessons (not just tutorials) will help give ESL students the step up they need to do well at university and in the workforce. Being bilingual is great in a world that is increasingly more and more globalized... but a student who grows up in an L1 home and an L2 world needs to work hard to make the most of the gift they've been given.
2007-02-06 11:00:30
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answer #1
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answered by Jetgirly 6
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It depends how you want it to be. If you want your children to understand the native culture & its historical details then you should teach them the native language. If that is not the case and you or they are never going to return and you or they are not interested in knowing the native culture then it is not required.
2007-02-05 17:46:59
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answer #2
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answered by ssmindia 6
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sure. for 2 motives: a million) bilingualism is quite solid for a infant and is easy for them to do; 2) if the immigrant's English isn't very solid, that's what they are going to be coaching their infant. in case you're speaking in terms of homeschooling, I nonetheless say sure. they could only might desire to verify their infants have common English touch, pay attention to English thoughts on tape, take part in training, activities, and so on. they could probable might desire to verify of this better than the conventional homeschooling determine. people who're asserting that the familiar language to be under pressure might desire to be English are off-base and are too caught interior the melting pot ideology. right here in Canada, we are multicultural and inspire multiculturalism. As a former instructor, I observed childrens for all time who had distinctive abode languages than they did in college. the infants have been only superb. they have not have been given any concern with bilingualism.
2016-09-28 11:54:18
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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Absolutely!
They should also make sure that they get a sound foundation in the official language of the country they have settled in. It is shown time and time again that students who are bilingual score better in communication exams.
They should also make sure to give them a solid experience in the cultural richness of both the heritage culture and the current culture.
2007-02-05 17:42:14
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answer #4
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answered by elcid812 4
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i think its a terrible shame if they don't and if anyone recommends to speak english at home, i think its bad advice. children will learn to speak english if they live in america...its inevitable but its tougher to learn other languages while here b/c we don't have a solid base of teaching other languages. bilingual people are sought after in jobs and it makes traveling nice b/c many languages have similar sounding vocabulary. language development is easiest at younger ages. its just another tool you can provide your kids in order to be successful in their future...
2007-02-05 17:42:58
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answer #5
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answered by rita 2
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You should always teach your children your mother toungue!
The roots and culture of a person are always important
2007-02-05 17:43:07
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answer #6
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answered by horng_lee 1
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