Jump to content

Can babies learn both Thai and English at the same time?


715

Recommended Posts

In the first few months of a baby's life they analyse all the spoken sounds they hear. After that, that learned sensitivity to specific sounds is the foundation to 'listening'. So if they hear multiple languages during the first few months of their lives before they learn to talk, then their abilty to understand and recognize words sounding like those they heard in the first few months, will be greatly enhanced. So the more variety of spoken languages they hear in the first few months, the better their ability to learn and use more languages as they grow older.

If you want detailed information, look at this - http://www.ted.com/talks/patricia_kuhl_the_linguistic_genius_of_babies.html

Good Luck!

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

My wifes neice who has a set of twins who are 3 1/2, learned English and Thai from their birth.

Their Dad is American and my neice is 100% Thai. They were exposed to their Thai Mawmaw and Pawpaw

Speaking Thai, and their Dad and me speaking english and they are doing fine.

They also have an 18 month old who is very fluent in both languages.

The kids automatically learn who to speak which language to.

Don't worry, they will learn just fine!.

Chulai

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If I can give you my personal observations through experience and research doing my master's degree and when I was a principal in the US. I also did a survey on this particular topic during my PhD.

My conclusion was depending on the age of the child. The child should be near the fourth grade or 8 to 9 years old before teaching and additional language. They had a tendency of being the most receptive to any foreign language is during those years. Prior to those years they had a tendency to display mass confusion.

Parents have a tendency to promote an education at times way too early. The readiness level depends on the individual child. However, if promoting a foreign language to a child I would walk very cautiously at doing this at a very early age.

If seeking any additional information I would be happy to honor any questions that you may have.

Can you point to some information on the web to support your theories? I am reading through several sites, and none support your claims.

Bilingual skills are best learned from each parent speaking to their child in their native language at a very early age.

I would be willing to read anything on the web that supports your slaims

9 years old is wayyyy too late to start learning. Why would the mom and dad not speak to them in their own languages starting at birth.....?

Why restrict the baby from that opportunity??

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

If I can give you my personal observations through experience and research doing my master's degree and when I was a principal in the US. I also did a survey on this particular topic during my PhD.

My conclusion was depending on the age of the child. The child should be near the fourth grade or 8 to 9 years old before teaching and additional language. They had a tendency of being the most receptive to any foreign language is during those years. Prior to those years they had a tendency to display mass confusion.

Parents have a tendency to promote an education at times way too early. The readiness level depends on the individual child. However, if promoting a foreign language to a child I would walk very cautiously at doing this at a very early age.

If seeking any additional information I would be happy to honor any questions that you may have.

Garbage. All that has been proven wrong. Seriously.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I speak Luo, Swahili, Gikuyu and some English. My mother was Gikuyu and my father was Luo. My national language is Swahili and at school, the language of instruction was English.

I have a 5year old (step) daughter that speaks French and English. She's learning some Thai at the moment and her progress is pleasing.

I never thought it could happen, but babies are darn smart and flexible beings, who can learn and adapt to languages rather easily.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

If I can give you my personal observations through experience and research doing my master's degree and when I was a principal in the US. I also did a survey on this particular topic during my PhD.

My conclusion was depending on the age of the child. The child should be near the fourth grade or 8 to 9 years old before teaching and additional language. They had a tendency of being the most receptive to any foreign language is during those years. Prior to those years they had a tendency to display mass confusion.

Parents have a tendency to promote an education at times way too early. The readiness level depends on the individual child. However, if promoting a foreign language to a child I would walk very cautiously at doing this at a very early age.

If seeking any additional information I would be happy to honor any questions that you may have.

Garbage. All that has been proven wrong. Seriously.

Right on!

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

If I can give you my personal observations through experience and research doing my master's degree and when I was a principal in the US. I also did a survey on this particular topic during my PhD.

My conclusion was depending on the age of the child. The child should be near the fourth grade or 8 to 9 years old before teaching and additional language. They had a tendency of being the most receptive to any foreign language is during those years. Prior to those years they had a tendency to display mass confusion.

Parents have a tendency to promote an education at times way too early. The readiness level depends on the individual child. However, if promoting a foreign language to a child I would walk very cautiously at doing this at a very early age.

If seeking any additional information I would be happy to honor any questions that you may have.

My mother and I conversed in Gikuyu and my father spoke with me in Luo. With my maid and our neighbours outside, we spoke in Swahili. I first went to school at the age of 6 and began learning English. I also studied French and now speak it fluently. All my siblings are fluent in all these languages.

My conclusion is that you may have carried out your survey amongst subjects that are/were not exposed to multilingual environment.

If you're in doubt, I am more than happy to alter your line of thought on this issue.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

If I can give you my personal observations through experience and research doing my master's degree and when I was a principal in the US. I also did a survey on this particular topic during my PhD.

My conclusion was depending on the age of the child. The child should be near the fourth grade or 8 to 9 years old before teaching and additional language. They had a tendency of being the most receptive to any foreign language is during those years. Prior to those years they had a tendency to display mass confusion.

Parents have a tendency to promote an education at times way too early. The readiness level depends on the individual child. However, if promoting a foreign language to a child I would walk very cautiously at doing this at a very early age.

If seeking any additional information I would be happy to honor any questions that you may have.

Total rubbish.

So do the Swiss wait until 8,to start the 2nd of 4 languages?,,are you a former thai education minister?

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

If I can give you my personal observations through experience and research doing my master's degree and when I was a principal in the US. I also did a survey on this particular topic during my PhD.

My conclusion is that you may have carried out your survey amongst subjects that are/were not exposed to multilingual environment.

If you're in doubt, I am more than happy to alter your line of thought on this issue.

Don't argue, Africanteacher has a masters degree and was principal in US. BS, sorry.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

If I can give you my personal observations through experience and research doing my master's degree and when I was a principal in the US. I also did a survey on this particular topic during my PhD.

My conclusion is that you may have carried out your survey amongst subjects that are/were not exposed to multilingual environment.

If you're in doubt, I am more than happy to alter your line of thought on this issue.

Don't argue, Africanteacher has a masters degree and was principal in US. BS, sorry.

Oh, darn it. Missed that bit

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If I can give you my personal observations through experience and research doing my master's degree and when I was a principal in the US. I also did a survey on this particular topic during my PhD.

My conclusion was depending on the age of the child. The child should be near the fourth grade or 8 to 9 years old before teaching and additional language. They had a tendency of being the most receptive to any foreign language is during those years. Prior to those years they had a tendency to display mass confusion.

Parents have a tendency to promote an education at times way too early. The readiness level depends on the individual child. However, if promoting a foreign language to a child I would walk very cautiously at doing this at a very early age.

If seeking any additional information I would be happy to honor any questions that you may have.

My mother and I conversed in Gikuyu and my father spoke with me in Luo. With my maid and our neighbours outside, we spoke in Swahili. I first went to school at the age of 6 and began learning English. I also studied French and now speak it fluently. All my siblings are fluent in all these languages.

My conclusion is that you may have carried out your survey amongst subjects that are/were not exposed to multilingual environment.

If you're in doubt, I am more than happy to alter your line of thought on this issue.

Yeah, this type of thinking was kind of popular back in the 70s and the only thing it resulted in was people not teaching their kids second or third languages--one girl I knew had a French father and an American mother, but they heard about the "confusion" thing. Result? At 20, she was in France struggling to learn French, a language she would have been fluent in had her parents taught her.

I have worked with languages for quite a while now in many different contexts, and your experience sounds correct. And, too true, a lot of people I have met in Africa speak several languages quite fluently, whether European or African languages.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

My baby is doing exactly this at the moment. Some words are quite clearly spoken in Thai, with others in English. For what it's worth I've read about both the positives and negatives of this very subject. One article I read spoke of how beneficial it is to introduce a child to another language as early as possible. Whereas another article I read said that learning two languages so early in life can in fact have a detrimental effect on the child as they pick up their native language much slower because of the use of an additional langauge.

So to be honest, I'm none the wiser if it is good or not but I'd also be interested to hear about anyone elses experience in this.

I am the parent of a 3 year old, who is in a very good school that teaches English. She speaks Thai primarily with family, neighbors, etc. but can hold an English conversation with teachers and parents of the other students. I agree with the post that they are sponges soaking up water. Their brains absorb everything much easier than older kids or adults. My wife converses in Thai with her, I converse in English. When speaking in either language, if mid sentence, she cant think of the word she wants, she uses the equivalent from the other language. To the prospective parents, go for it, and worry not about language issues. As the Brits say, ''Little Pitchers have big ears''. Kids don't miss a thing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm loving hearing my little boy speak two languages. He's 16 months now and is saying some words just in Thai, some just in English and some in both languages. He understands instructions in both Thai and English. I also have a Thai friend married to a lady from Belguim. Their children speak Thai, French and English fluently. Like most have said, it's best to start them with two languages from birth, anyone saying otherwise is in cuckoo land.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Don't see why the rule.

We all mix English and Thai, doesn't seem to bother baby.

One of the only risks of teaching children 2 languages is that they get two broken languages and not one or two whole. Zero risk if you follow the "rule".

If both parents are bilingual 100% fluent in both languages then the only problem would be when the child begins to try to separate the two languages

If either parent isn't 100% fluent and have a foreign accent then you are making problems for the child by speaking the "wrong" language. Your native language should be used so the child gets it 100% correct with all the colors and shades, will be able to read between the lines and some day be a poet or what ever they wish. Give them two broken languages and they will never understand either perfectly.

For the child, in the long run, better an uneducated ghetto parent give a child his/her language than an educated one give them one they don't fully comprehend.

( father of 5. 20 year span all bilingual 3 different languages and I've studied the subject at University level )

Interesting post. My mother tongue is french, my english is pretty good but I can't say I'm fluent. My accent is terrible to be honest. We speak english at home with my thai gf. She speaks better english than most thais I have ever met but it's not excellent.

Should we have children, I should then strictly speak to them in french and she in Thai. I wonder when and how would they learn english? I'm guessing they will get bits and pieces from when we speak english, and the rest from kindergarten/school if we put them in international ones.

Would it be enough to become fluent in English? French is nice but pretty much useless nowadays, I'd rather see them become bilingual thai/english with spoken french on the side than thai/french and some english...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Don't see why the rule.

We all mix English and Thai, doesn't seem to bother baby.

One of the only risks of teaching children 2 languages is that they get two broken languages and not one or two whole. Zero risk if you follow the "rule".

If both parents are bilingual 100% fluent in both languages then the only problem would be when the child begins to try to separate the two languages

If either parent isn't 100% fluent and have a foreign accent then you are making problems for the child by speaking the "wrong" language. Your native language should be used so the child gets it 100% correct with all the colors and shades, will be able to read between the lines and some day be a poet or what ever they wish. Give them two broken languages and they will never understand either perfectly.

For the child, in the long run, better an uneducated ghetto parent give a child his/her language than an educated one give them one they don't fully comprehend.

( father of 5. 20 year span all bilingual 3 different languages and I've studied the subject at University level )

Interesting post. My mother tongue is french, my english is pretty good but I can't say I'm fluent. My accent is terrible to be honest. We speak english at home with my thai gf. She speaks better english than most thais I have ever met but it's not excellent.

Should we have children, I should then strictly speak to them in french and she in Thai. I wonder when and how would they learn english? I'm guessing they will get bits and pieces from when we speak english, and the rest from kindergarten/school if we put them in international ones.

Would it be enough to become fluent in English? French is nice but pretty much useless nowadays, I'd rather see them become bilingual thai/english with spoken french on the side than thai/french and some english...

You can speak to them in English and French. I asked a similar question to my linguistics professor. He said that it is better to keep languages separate, but if you have to mix them it will only take the child a couple of years extra to figure it out. (i.e. if the average french child if considered a native speaker at 5 years old, your child may be that at 7 just because of the mixing of the languages)

It is better to do that and get English and French later, than just French only earlier.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

A piece of advice a doctor gave us when our girl was learning to speak was for the parents not to mix the languages ie, father always speak English and mother always speak Thai and don't fall into the Thinglish trap as it confuses the kid.

I have a hunch that kids brought up multilingually gain more intelligence, though I don't know if there has been any research done to back up that opinion

Link to comment
Share on other sites

A piece of advice a doctor gave us when our girl was learning to speak was for the parents not to mix the languages ie, father always speak English and mother always speak Thai and don't fall into the Thinglish trap as it confuses the kid.

I have a hunch that kids brought up multilingually gain more intelligence, though I don't know if there has been any research done to back up that opinion

And why would a random doctor know anything at all about the subject?

Most of my family members randomly change languages between Thai and English depending on the subject.

Thai soaps ..... we speak Thai.

American movies ...... we speak English.

Random conversations, Thai food only has Thai names so we speak Thai, English food, etc.

The whole idea of limiting language use is nonsense.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I was brought up bilingual from birth so that it is absolutely not a problem. However, a bilingual or multilingual child will tend to think differently from monoglot ones, especially as an adult as he will not be so easily brainwashed by the media of one particular culture. It is to eb recommended. Go for it!!!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

We speak 3 languages at home and our daughter of 14 months picks words out of all 3, I presume she will sort it out at some time between the 3.

This is commonly referred to as code switching, nothing to worry about. Adults do this as well when they use one language and borrows a word from another language when they need or sometimes to show off (yes, really). There is a reverse code switching as well, for instance, when you hear expats in Thailand speak English but switch for the few Thai words they know.

"you can stop trng kham the hotel"

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I was brought up bilingual from birth so that it is absolutely not a problem. However, a bilingual or multilingual child will tend to think differently from monoglot ones, especially as an adult as he will not be so easily brainwashed by the media of one particular culture. It is to eb recommended. Go for it!!!!

Since my adopted daughter (100% Thai} was a baby I have only spoken to her in English my wife spoke in Thai. She had no problem

using both languages and is now fluent in both. She is now six years old. I did not work so spent a great deal of time with her

I used English books re ABC, colours, shapes etc. Also English nursery rhymes. Even now if we watch videos I ensure most

are in English. My wife assures me that she has a good command of the Thai language and she is now learning Chinese

at school. It is trully amazing to see her transfer from one language to another without hesitation. Go for it.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.










×
×
  • Create New...