Expand a Child's World: Involving
bilingual families and English language learners in the classroom
and at home.
According to the US Census Bureau,
over 20% of the US population is of "foreign stock" - that is,
they are either foreign-born or have at least one parent who
was born in another country. In 2000, 47 million people in the
United States spoke a non-English language at home, an increase
of over 45% in just one decade. The number of native-born Americans
with close ties to another country is expected to grow even more
over the next few decades.
While these demographic changes present
many challenges for educators, they also offer terrific opportunities
to teach children about our world. Rather than trying to "Americanize" the
ethnic community, we should make efforts to better involve English-as-a-second-language
(ESL) students and bilingual families in the classroom by encouraging
them to share their language and culture.
The benefits of such involvement
are two-fold. First, it would teach a respect for diversity and
build an interest in foreign languages and cultures among all
students. Second, it would drive participation and build self-esteem
among ESL and bilingual students with diverse backgrounds. It
will encourage them to value their culture and language. This
cultural involvement will help all children
thrive in our increasingly multiethnic and multilinguistic communities.
Following are several suggestions for teachers of young
children on how to involve ESL and bilingual families in bringing
diversity into the classroom. Parents can build on these ideas
at home and in playgroups, or suggest them to their children's
teachers or daycare providers.
- Celebrate international holidays
or festivals. Let students or immigrant parents share with
the class the meanings, traditions and unique foods related to
the holidays they celebrate.
- Read bilingual books out loud.
Ask a bilingual or ESL student to read a book in his or her
native language and then let another student read the same book
in English. This involves the ESL student and helps support literacy
development in both languages. It also exposes the native English
speakers to the sounds and text of other languages. For classrooms
with very young children, a bilingual teacher or parent can read
the non-English version. If a native speaker is not available
to read the foreign-language story, CDs or tapes of great stories
are available in many languages.
- Sing and listen to songs in
other languages. Many young children, if encouraged, derive
great pleasure from singing their favorite songs to friends.
- Ask children to bring in stamps
from other countries. Merylie Wade Houston, a founding member
of the Early Childhood Diversity Network of Canada, suggests
that children deposit envelopes from their family mail into
a class mailbox. "After
talking about the stamps and where they came from, you can
use them to make simple cognitive games, such as lotto, bingo
and memory cards."
- Display multicultural posters.
Make the classroom inviting by displaying posters that have
text in other languages, illustrations of multicultural children
or scenes from other countries.
By involving bilingual students
and immigrant families in classrooms or daycare settings, we
are demonstrating and teaching a respect for linguistic and
cultural diversity. At the same time, we broaden the horizons
of both native and non-native children. © Anneke
V. Forzani, Language Lizard, LLC. 2006.
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Contact Language Lizard President and Founder, Anneke Forzani,
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