- 健康醫療
- 兒童的書籍
- 兒童福利
- 學校和學齡兒童
- 托兒,幼兒照顧和教育
- 暴力防治
- 權益倡導與社區建設
- 父母和家庭
- Hands-on activities
- Parent activism on health
- Parent activism on poverty and welfare
- Parent and teacher action
- Parent involvement in child care
- 健康醫療
- 兒童受虐防治
- 兒童發展與家庭
- 兒童福利與家庭
- 受刑人的孩子
- 在學校的家長社會運動
- 在學校的家長社會運動
- 多元文化/多元化和家庭
- 嬰兒/幼兒
- 學齡的就學準備
- 家庭成員的關係
- 家庭支援成功!
- 家庭暴力
- 家長之聲
- 對托兒的家長社會運動
- 暴力防治
- 正面的親子教育/管教
- 父母和家庭的建議
- 特殊兒童
- 社交/情緒發展
- 社區資源/家庭支援
- 祖父母/年長者
- 移民家庭
- 貧窮/社會福利
- 達成使父母成為領導人的途徑
- 離婚
- 養育兒童
- 貧窮/收入/社會福利
抱歉! 此篇目前無法閱讀,請參考英文版本或下載PDF其他語言的版本
“If they lose Spanish, I lose them”
Preschool programs can—and should—help children keep their home language as they learn English
It’s important for me to teach my children Spanish for communication and closeness. If they lose Spanish, I lose them,” says a parent of a preschooler in San Mateo County. Graciela Italiano-Thomas, chief executive officer of Los Angeles Universal Preschool (LAUP), sympathizes: “It’s hard to guide children (in the U.S.) when you don’t speak English fluently. It’s best to maintain the home language.”
Research also shows, according to the national Head Start office, that bilingual children have better learning skills—and better job opportunities when they grow up!
How can preschool programs support young children in continuing to learn their home languages while learning English?
The Early Childhood Language Development Institute
Last year, Ana Cervantes’ five-year-old daughter Evelyn attended the Community Education Center’s preschool program in Redwood City. Like most preschoolers, Evelyn spent her mornings painting, cutting, and coloring. Cervantes, who volunteers in the classroom once a month, says the bilingual staff “speak both Spanish and English, which is good for me because I don’t speak English, but good for Evelyn too—she can use her Spanish but is also learning English.”
Preschool teachers in San Mateo County have a unique resource: the Early Childhood Language Development Institute (ECLDI). Begun in 2003, the institute offers workshops to preschool teachers and parents on topics such as bilingual/multilingual language development, teacher-family partnerships, and transitioning to the K-12 system.
Home language helps
Barbara Applegate, state preschool director at the San Mateo County Office of Education, says, “Research shows that the stronger your foundation is in the first language, the faster and easier it is to learn the second language. The best thing we can do to help children learn a new language successfully is to help them develop their home language at the same time as we help them learn English.”
Soodie Ansari, ECLDI project specialist, says, “We do a lot of work on strategies to support home culture and language (see below: Supporting children's home language and culture). If we bring in children’s culture, that creates a sense of belonging, which has an impact on the child’s sense of identity and self-esteem, the quality of the learning experience, and academic success.”
Worries based on myths
Ansari says some of the concerns of parents and educators are based on “myths” about language learning. For example, some adults worry when a child mixes words from different languages. According to Ansari, this mixing of languages is quite common and lessens as a child’s vocabulary grows. “There’s no cause for alarm or correction,” she says. “We want the child to use language. You are not slowing down the (learning) of the second language or damaging (the child).” Young children have the brain capacity to learn two languages without getting confused.
Camino Nuevo
Located in the largely immigrant Los Angeles neighborhood of MacArthur Park, the Camino Nuevo Charter Academy serves children from preschool to 12th grade. The school staff is all bilingual. Preschool classes are almost entirely in Spanish, with more English added in each grade.
Some Spanish-speaking parents, “when they find out that Spanish is the primary language, want to go elsewhere,” says Natalie O’Neil, Camino Nuevo’s director of early childhood education. “I tell them by giving their child a solid foundation in Spanish they will be more successful academically and learn English more easily too.”
Home language is foundation
Italiano-Thomas of LAUP, which funds the preschool program at Camino Nuevo, says, “Working with young children, it’s important to understand that the child comes (as part of) a family system. Maintenance of the home language is so essential to the emotional and (learning) foundation for the rest the child’s life.”
Parents can see the results. One mother, whose youngest child attended Camino Nuevo preschool, told O’Neil, “I wish I had sent all my children to preschool. He’s so much farther along at four years old than my older kids.”
Developing good models
“What we’re doing at LAUP that’s so exciting,” says Italiano-Thomas, “is developing models that work. This is not about belief. The research is there. Our approach is to (avoid political arguments), to focus on what works for the success of children.”
Applegate agrees: “Right now, public school policy, mandated by Prop. 227 (the “English-only” initiative), is based on feelings. State policy—including the new preschool standards—should be based on research.”
Supporting children’s home language and culture
It’s best if young children have teachers who speak their language. But teachers can also:
- Provide books, music, and signs in the languages children speak at home
- Have children dictate stories in their home language and post them on the walls
- Provide objects commonly used in the children’s homes
- Sing songs and learn games in children’s home languages
- Learn at least a few words in the child’s home language
- Play a tape of a parent telling a story, talking, or singing in the home language
- Try reading or telling simple stories in children’s home language even if you don’t speak it fluently!
- Use the “language weaving” technique (switching between the first and second language)
- Express enthusiasm about the benefits of being bilingual and your desire to learn about the cultures of the children.
—adapted from an ECLDI handout
Developing preschool standards for children learning English
The California Department of Education is now drafting “preschool learning standards” (see Early Care and Education:Preschool after Prop. 82).
Asked what the standards will say about children learning English, Gwen Stephens, assistant director of the Child Development Division, said, “The preschool standards will address language needs through the language and literacy standards and English learning benchmarks.”
Advocates say the standards should follow these guidelines:
Key principles
- Base standards on research.
- Support children’s home language.
—LAUP & ECLDI
- Do not use English Immersion in preschool.
- Train preschool teachers in meeting needs of children learning English.
—APIsCAN
Developing standards
- Include language learning experts in developing, reviewing, and implementing standards.
- Allow public review of standards before they are adopted.
—APIsCAN
Resources
- Becoming Bilingual: First and Second Language Acquisition, Philip Gonzalez, Head Start Information and Publication Center.
- Preschool English Learners: Principles and Practices to Promote Language Literacy and Learning, California Department of Education, 2006, 916-445-1260
- Developing the Young Bilingual Learner, NAEYC video, item #801, 202-232-8777, www.naeyc.org
Extra resources from the Children’s Advocate bulletin (updated 9-06)
- English Learning for Preschoolers Project, from WestEd's Center for Child and Family Studies, provides teaching strategies, materials, and trainings on issues affecting preschoolers who speak a language other than English. Online at http://www.edgateway.net/pub/docs/pel/home.htm
In Spanish at
http://www.edgateway.net/pub/docs/pels/home.htm
- One Child, Two Languages offers ways to help children learn a second language and create a supportive classroom environment. $28. Available from RedLeaf Press, (800) 423-8309, summary online at http://www.redleafpress.org/
- Pre-K and Latinos: The Foundation for America's Future, from Pre-K Now, provides policy recommendations for increasing the number of Latino children in preschool. Online at http://www.preknow.com/documents/
Pre-KandLatinos_July2006.pdf
- Two-Way and Monolingual English Immersion in Preschool Education, from NIEER, finds that an English/Spanish immersion program helped children learn more Spanish without hurting their English skills. Online at http://nieer.org/resources/research/TwoWay.pdf
To stay informed about new and upcoming Children’s Advocate articles, related resources, and advocacy opportunities, sign up for our Children’s Advocate bulletin
使用我們出版的文章
U在你的工作領域中與人分享兒童權益擁護者的各項消息! 你可以自行列印文章,做為傳單或發行的刊物,請在您的文章上註明出自兒童行動聯盟,以做為給我們的獎譽,記得要寄一份您的刊物給我們喔!
