How To Get Your Kids To Speak Your Language
Frank Gerace
Note: This experience had to do with preserving Spanish
for our kids but the principles are valid for anyone trying to help
their kids speak and preserve any language and culture.
COUNTRY OF MANY PEOPLES
This country,,, (The authors raised their kids in the United
States but they believe that their experience can be useful for
people in other non-spanish-speaking countries.) This country is
made up of people from all over the world. We or our parents
came from Latin countries. We now live here. We function in two different
worlds, the American world and the world of our
parents. All of us live in these two different worlds in
different ways. Some of us were born in the countries our
parents came from; others of us were born here. This makes a
difference in how and how much we live in our two worlds.
COUNTRY OF MANY LANGUAGES
The one thing that is most important in our parents' world is
their language which is also ours in different ways. The
Spanish language of our parents is an issue to all of us every
day. We may be proud to speak it well. We may be ashamed at not speaking
it well. Some of us may have gone through periods of trying not to speak
it because we wanted to speak English
better. We may only speak it when we come across someone who needs help
in understanding English. We may only remember some sayings of our grandparents
or children's songs taught to us by our parents.
You may want to review (or study it for the first time) your
Spanish. We could only find one reference for you. It is
expensive and is a textbook, not too appealing but complete.
Take a look at Nuevos Mundos, Spanish for Native Speakers 2nd Edition,
Workbook : Curso de espanol para estudiantes
bilingues"
F. Bruce Robinson, assistant director in the National Endowment for the
Humanities' division of education programs asks "How does America
preserve this important resource of people who are proficient in other
languages? Instead of trying to depress the knowledge these students come
to school with, we ought to be trying to build on it." (Chronicle
of Higher Education, Feb. 2, 1994, page A15)
OUR CHILDREN AND OUR LANGUAGE
We all want our children to speak the language of their
heritage. We discount the opinions of those who say that it is
better to forget Spanish and to concentrate on speaking English
well. These people are just wrong. It does not hurt your English
to speak another language; it helps. Spanish is particularly
useful to children in their learning English vocabulary. Just
today I taught my daughter the difference between vowels and
consonants. Knowing Spanish really helped with the idea of the
consonants. I told her that the consonants have no voice; they
can only be pronounced with the vowels. The con-sonants suenan con the
vowels.
But although most of us agree that it is a good thing for our
kids to speak Spanish, most kids in the US whose parents were
born in Latin American countries do not speak Spanish well.
Even if both parents speak Spanish at home, quite often the
kids answer their parents in English. Look around at your Latin
friends and relatives and you will see that most give up on
teaching their kids to speak Spanish. Chicano and Puerto Rican
families seem to have a little better luck than Latinos from
other countries with keeping Spanish alive in their barrios but
even their younger generation is losing fluency in Spanish.
However, parents who want their children to speak Spanish can
go against the current and set the stage for their children to
grow up speaking Spanish. It is not easy. Most families fail in
their resolve but it can be done. This report will give some
hints on how to improve your chances
REASONS FOR OUR CHILDREN TO SPEAK SPANISH
There are many reasons why it is good for the kids to speak
your language. One obvious reason is the advantage that it
might be for them in the job market. As long as we live in a
world with shrunken distances and growing international trade,
someone has to be able to talk with people from other
countries.
Professor Francisco X. Alarcón of the University of California
at Davis says that "now that we are moving toward a global
economy, it's O.K. to be bilingual in the U.S." (Chronicle of
Higher Education, Feb.2, 1994, page A15)
Another good reason for you to work at your children's learning
to speak Spanish is because it will make you proud to hear the
compliments of your friends and countrymen because your
children are able to speak your language. You grow in prestige
as a person who values your roots.
Your children will also be able to speak with their relatives
thanks to improved phone service which is entering the most
remote villages of our countries. Direct dialing from the
United States is economical enough to be able call a few times
a year. The thrill of being able to talk to their uncles,
aunts, and cousins will get the kids interested in keeping up
their language.
They will be speaking to their relatives not only by phone but
will be able to visit them. The experience of knowing another
culture will put them ahead of their classmates who have no
ties to their roots.
Another reason to encourage our children to speak Spanish can
be gotten from the history of a previous group of Latin
immigrants to the United States, the Italians.
"Some social critics were aware of the consequences of sudden
assimilation. Mary McDowell, a social worker, wrote en 1904:
'The contempt for the experiences and languages of their
parents which foreign children sometimes exhibit... is
doubtless due in part to the overestimation which the school
places upon speaking English. This cutting into his family
loyalty takes away one of the most conspicuous and valuable
traits of the Italian child.' She attributed the lawlessness of
some of the immigrant children to their disrespect for their
parents and therefore for all authority."
(La Storia: Five Centuries of the Italian American Experience,
Mangione and Morreale, p. 222)
Finally, the ability to speak another language can be a great
boost to a child's self esteem. If the child's parents make it
clear that they are proud of their language and of their
people, the child will feel closer to his parents and to their
heritage, customs, and most importantly to their values.
HOW TO ENCOURAGE YOUR CHILDREN TO SPEAK SPANISH
Start early. Try to speak only Spanish to the child. If only
one parent speaks Spanish well, that person should always speak
Spanish with the child. Do not be afraid of "confusing" the
child. Children can identify with different speakers of
different languages as they grow up.
1. Read simple stories and fairy tales to the child in Spanish.
if you can't find children's literature in Spanish, then make
your own translations as you go along. It is not necessary that
the translation be perfect. Make up your own stories. It is
important for your child to have the memories of hearing
nursery rhymes in Spanish.
2. Leave your radio tuned de Spanish language stations.
Linguists place a great deal of importance on "passive
listening" as part of learning a language, especially for young
children.
3. In most areas there is a Spanish language TV station. Put on
the Saturday morning cartoons in Spanish.
4. Teach simple nursery rhymes and simple songs to your child.
If you don't remember them or if you were not taught any from
your parents' traditions, look for them in garage sales,
college bookstores, or your local library. Do you remember el
patito or pinpón? Look for songs in Spanish.
5. Rent videos in Spanish. They are beginning to be available -
and not only in cities with a big Spanish-speaking population!
6. Use proverbs and dichos in Spanish. Some expressions that
you would say in English are just as legitimate proverbs in
Spanish. Get your child used to hearing them in Spanish. You
can do this even if you don't speak Spanish well. For example,
say mejor tarde que nunca instead of "better late than never".
Little by little, poco a poco, you'll feel at home with more
uniquely Latin expressions. They have something of the culture
wrapped up in them. They are stubbornly different from Anglo
Saxon proverbs.
7. Get used to saying menos mal in place of "just as well". The
English expression is "better than nothing"; in many
Southamerican countries, the equivalent expression is peor es
nada. Find proverbs.
8. Don't correct their Spanish when they speak. Don't interrupt
the flow of their conversation. Don't make their speaking
Spanish to be another homework assignment. It should be
something special, even something "secret" in your family. Kids
like the mystery and intrigue of having something special of
their own. Their speaking Spanish should be a joyful,
non-threatening experience. If they make mistakes in their
grammar, correct their errors by using the same expression
correctly a few minutes after. Don't come right back at them
with the correct form or they will begin to feel conscious of
their expression and choke off their freedom of expression.
9. Get a good syllabary to teach them the value of the letters
and how to read in Spanish. If your child's first language is
Spanish teach them to read Spanish before they learn English.
You will be doing them a big favor. They will learn to sound
out the regular spelling of Spanish which will be a good base
on which to learn how to read in English. You will get the same
results as those who spend money on expensive Phonics programs.
10. The best way to get your children to grow in Spanish is to
send them to spend some time with relatives or friends where
they will only speak and hear Spanish. This works best at
around 7 years old when children play easily with one another
and when Spanish will just come naturally even to the child who
has very little exposure to the language. Another good age for a
child to be exposed to a Spanish speaking environment is at
around 12 years old. At this age, the child has greater mental
development and can observe customs and situations in which
certain expressions are used. At twelve years old most kids are
still pre-adolescents and are not hampered by the embarrassment,
self consciousness, and "feeling different" which hold back
teenagers from learning a language or customs different from
their own.
Use any of the above methods but start! Your efforts will
communicate to your children the importance that you give to
Spanish even if these efforts are not always completely
successful.
©1994 F.GERACE
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