The_Ogre
Honorary Master
So what language does she speak to them?Also be careful who speaks to your children. I've banned the nanny from speaking English to the kids as its not her home language and my kids will not speak Cape Flats English!
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So what language does she speak to them?Also be careful who speaks to your children. I've banned the nanny from speaking English to the kids as its not her home language and my kids will not speak Cape Flats English!
Surely the alternative is Cape Flats Afrikaans. Which I wouldn't think would be any better an option.Also be careful who speaks to your children. I've banned the nanny from speaking English to the kids as its not her home language and my kids will not speak Cape Flats English!
Any of you done this?
If a child grows up being exposed to more than one language at the same time, do they learn the two languages simultaneously or should there be some sort of method to the madness from the side of the caregivers?
Any of you done this?
If a child grows up being exposed to more than one language at the same time, do they learn the two languages simultaneously or should there be some sort of method to the madness from the side of the caregivers?
Been there done that. Except it was trilingually.Any of you done this?
If a child grows up being exposed to more than one language at the same time, do they learn the two languages simultaneously or should there be some sort of method to the madness from the side of the caregivers?
The reason why I said focus on the primary language first so they have a good grip on it is because:
le mouton (or whatever)
if she doesn't know the english, it's going to be hard for her to translate the french to english (or afrikaans)
I think what you are doing is spot on, you need to give her a few quizzes during the day to keep her sharp though (I did that with math so they can learn their time tables properly because whatever the teacher did wasn't working)
Like, "Mommy can't remember, whats sheep in french!?"
etc
Some very conflicting advice here! Some say focus on a primary language first, others say the child's brain is able to take it all in.
My daughter obviously hears English most of the time - her dad speaks English to her, the radio and TV is set to mainly English programmes.
I speak English and Afrikaans to her, but I try to focus on Afrikaans mainly.
From day 1 when I employed the nanny (whose first language is French), I told her to speak to my daughter in French. It has been 6 months now and she is able to understand the nanny to some extent and she also starts repeating some words in French.The benefit of this is that my daughter will hopefully be able to speak French with a French accent!
So we will see how it turns out![]()
The reason why I said focus on the primary language first so they have a good grip on it is because:
le mouton (or whatever)
if she doesn't know the english, it's going to be hard for her to translate the french to english (or afrikaans)
I think what you are doing is spot on, you need to give her a few quizzes during the day to keep her sharp though (I did that with math so they can learn their time tables properly because whatever the teacher did wasn't working)
Like, "Mommy can't remember, whats sheep in french!?"
etc
Quiz her?? She is 16 months old, she can only say a few wordsWe're far away from quizzes, we're just laying some foundations here.