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Foreign Language Learning During Childhood

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This paper attempts to clarify Importance of learning a foreign language in childhood. Among philosophers, empiricism and the psychologists, behaviourists believe that language is a social creature and like other social behaviours are acquired. This is perhaps the most complex and arguable question that have risen among linguists, psychologists and philosophers about language: how a child learns foreign language? Language learning is natural. Babies are born with the ability to learn it and that learning begins at birth. Many experts believe that learning the language before the age of ten years allow children to speak correct and fluent as an indigenous person. Therefore, whatever the earlier children become familiar with foreign language, he have better chance to speak proficiency. Research suggests that from birth through age 10 is the best time to introduce new languages to a young child. In this paper the child will learn the language faster, retain it better and most often speak it with near-native pronunciation. Finally, this paper highlights advantages and disadvantages foreign language learning in childhood.
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1877-0428 © 2011 Published by Elsevier Ltd.
doi:10.1016/j.sbspro.2011.11.160
Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 28 (2011) 872 – 876
WCETR 2011
Foreign language learning during childhood
Babak Ghasemi
a
, Masoud Hashemi
b
a
Young Researchers Club, Toyserkan Branch, Islamic Azad University, Toyserkan, IRAN
1
b
Department of English Language, Toyserkan Branch, Islamic Azad University, Toyserkan, IRAN
Abstract
This paper attempts to clarify Importance of learning a foreign language in childhood. Among philosophers, empiricism and the
psychologists, behaviourists believe that language is a social creature and like other social behaviours are acquired. This is
perhaps the most complex and arguable question that have risen among linguists, psychologists and philosophers about language:
how a child learns foreign language?Language learning is natural. Babies are born with the ability to learn it and that learning
begins at birth. Many experts believe that learning the language before the age of ten years allow children to speak correct and
fluent as an indigenous person. Therefore, whatever the earlier children become familiar with foreign language, he have better
chance to speak proficiency. Research suggests that from birth through age 10 is the best time to introduce new languages to a
young child. In this paper the child will learn the language faster, retain it better and most often speak it with near-native
pronunciation. Finally, this paper highlights advantages and disadvantages foreign language learning in childhood.
Keywords: children, foreign language, childhood
1. Introduction
Many experts believe that learning the language before the age of ten years allow children to speak correct and
fluent as an indigenous person. Therefore, whatever the earlier children become familiar with foreign language, he
have better chance to speak proficiency. On the other hand language learning, except native language, can provide
develop a lifelong ability to more communicate with others. One of the important advantages of mastering a foreign
language is access to better job opportunitiesand the person will find deeper understanding to their own culture and
other nations. Including the benefits of knowing a foreign language in today's society, enhancing economic
competitiveness in the external surface, improving global communications and maintains and manage political and
security interests of a country. Research has shown that, if languages learning in children before puberty, children
are found more chances to speak a foreign language with a completely native pronunciation. In addition, familiarity
child with the culture of other nations spread his views and attitudes and provides the opportunity for him to
communicate with other people. We know now that studying a foreign language offers surprising benefits to
children. Research has demonstrated improved ability to communicate, better cognitive development, richer cultural
awareness and, ultimately, better job opportunities for those who know a foreign language Ferreira, F., & Morrison,
1Babak Ghasemi .Tel : +98-938-766-6174 , fax:+98-852-4225353
E-mail address : artman_2535@yahoo.com
Available online at www.sciencedirect.com
Open access under CC BY-NC-ND license.
873
Babak Ghasemi and Masoud Hashemi / Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 28 (2011) 872 – 876
F. J. (1994). What’s more, today’s children will all be required to have command of two languages by the time they
reach college Research suggests that from birth through age 10 is the best time to introduce new languages to a
young child. The child will learn the language faster, retain it better and most often speak it with near-native
pronunciation. Recent research indicates a young child up through age 5 can learn and process up to five languages!
Many parents deliberate over how to bring a new language into their little one’s life. Many experts agree the
bilingual approach for the very young child is best. Today’s parents know the importance of being bilingual. Now
they just need to know where to turn for assistance in finding fun and affordable bilingual products that will bring
the target language into their child’s life. The internet has made their search much easier than five years ago. Look
for bilingual programs that allow you to sample their visual or audio products on line so that you get a good feel for
the content and style of the language learning within that particular program.
1.1. The Acquisition of Language by Children
These examples of language learning, processing, and creation represent just a few of the many developments
between birth and linguistic maturity. During this period, children discover the raw materials in the sounds (or
gestures) of their language, learn how they are assembled into longer strings, and map these combinations onto
meaning. These processes unfold simultaneously, requiring children to integrate their capacities as they learn, to
crack the code of communication that surrounds them. Despite layers of complexity, each currently beyond the
reach of modern computers, young children readily solve the linguistic puzzles facing them, even surpassing their
input when it lacks the expected structure.
No less determined, researchers are assembling a variety of methodologies to uncover the mechanisms
underlying language acquisition. Months before infants utter their first word, their early language-learning
mechanisms can be examined by recording subtle responses to new combinations of sounds. Once children begin to
link words together, experiments using real-time measures of language processing can reveal the ways linguistic and
nonlinguistic information are integrated during listening. Natural experiments in which children are faced with
minimal language exposure can reveal the extent of inborn language-learning capacities and their effect on language
creation and change. As these techniques and others probing the child's mind are developed and their findings
integrated, they will reveal the child's solution to the puzzle of learning a language.
1.1.2. The best time to learn a foreign language
Today, enlightened school systems know better. Foreign languages are introduced in elementary school. Little
kids do learn more easily than high school students.But current research says to really do it right, start even earlier.
Start when the child is learning a first language. Babies have an astonishing ability to absorb. And in today’s
complex world, a foreign language is not a luxury it’s a necessity.We know now that studying a foreign language
offers surprising benefits to children Bloch, C., & Edwards, V. (1999). Research has demonstrated improved ability
to communicate, better cognitive development, richer cultural awareness and, ultimately, better job opportunities for
those who know a foreign language. What’s more, today’s children will all be required to have command of two
languages by the time they reach college. Research suggests that from birth through age 10 is the best time to
introduce new languages to a young child. The child will learn the language faster, retain it better and most often
speak it with near-native pronunciation. Recent research indicates a young child up through age 5 can learn and
process up to five languages!
1.2. Start language learning
Children begin learning languages at birth (infants pay attention to their parents' voices, as opposed to random
noises or even other languages), and haven't really mastered it subtleties before the age of ten years. Indeed, we
never really stop learning our language. (David Singleton.) This isn't exactly the sort of behavior (like foals walking
an hour after birth) that we call 'instinct' in animals.
But at least it's effortless, isn't it? Well, no, as we can see when children have a choice of languages to learn.
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874 Babak Ghasemi and Masoud Hashemi / Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 28 (2011) 872 – 876
Basic Stages of Language Learning
Stage One Learning Sounds
When babies are born, they can make and hear all the sounds in all the languages in the world. That’s about 150
sounds in about 6500 languages! However, no language uses all 150 sounds. The sounds a language uses are called
phonemes and English has about 44. Some languages use more and some use fewer.
In this stage, babies learn which phonemes belong to the language they are learning and which don’t. The ability to
recognize and produce those sounds is called “phonemic awareness,” which is important for children learning to
read.
Stage Two Learning Words
At this stage children essentially learn how the sounds in a language go together to make meaning. For example,
they learn that the sounds m, ah, m, and ee refer to that “being” that cuddles and feeds them mommy. That’s a
significant step because everything we say is really just a stream of sounds. To make sense of those sounds, a child
must be able to recognize where one word ends and another one begins. These are called “word boundaries.”
It’s not exactly words, though, that children are learning. What children are actually learning are morphemes, which
may or may not be words. That’s really not as confusing as it sounds. A morpheme is just a sound or sounds that
have a meaning, like the word mommy. The word mommy, however, has two morphemes: mommy and ±s. Children
at this stage can recognize that the ±s means "more than one" and will know that when that sound is added to other
words, it means the same thing "more than one."
Stage Three Learning Sentences
During this stage, children learn how to create sentences. That means they can put words in the correct order. For
example, they learn that in English we say "I want a cookie" and "I want a chocolate cookie," not "Want I a cookie"
or "I want cookie chocolate."
Children also learn the difference between grammatical correctness and meaning. Noam Chomsky created an
example of this difference in the sentence “Colorless green ideas sleep furiously.” Children will know that although
the sentence is grammatically correct, it doesn’t make sense. They know that green is a color and can't, therefore, be
colorless.(Harrison, B., & Papa, R. (2005)
1.3.Children learn languages easily
Imagine that you are faced with the following challenge. You must discover the internal structure of a system that
contains tens of thousands of units, all generated from a small set of materials. These units, in turn, can be
assembled into an infinite number of combinations. Although only a subset of those combinations is correct, the
subset itself is for all practical purposes infinite. Somehow you must converge on the structure of this system to use
it to communicate. And you are a very young child.
This system is human language. The units are words, the materials are the small set of sounds from which they
are constructed, and the combinations are the sentences into which they can be assembled. Given the complexity of
this system, it seems improbable that mere children could discover its underlying structure and use it to
communicate. Yet most do so with eagerness and ease, all within the first few years of life. of Learn a Young Age
Young children are uniquely suited to learning a foreign language. The developing brain is hard-wired to acquire
language never again will it be this natural or this easy!
875
Babak Ghasemi and Masoud Hashemi / Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 28 (2011) 872 – 876
1.4.1. Children Learn A Foreign language Naturally
Exposing your child to a foreign language young allows a child to optimize his or her learning potential, helping
to shape the brain at its most flexible stage. Young children are uniquely suited to learning a foreign language.
Learning a foreign language at a young age is cognitively as easy as learning a first language.
Young children can acquire native-like fluency as easily as they learned to walk. Where adults have to work
through an established first-language system, studying explicit grammar rules and practicing rote drills, the young
kids learn naturally, absorbing the sounds, structures, intonation patterns and rules of a foreign language intuitively,
as they did their mother tongue. The young brain is inherently flexible, uniquely hard-wired to acquire language
naturally.
Window of Opportunity
Early childhood is the best time for language acquisition. Ease of learning a foreign language diminishes with
age. Between birth and adolescence the brain is hard-wired to acquire language naturally. As child approaches
puberty, the nature of language learning and storage changes, becoming less flexible.
Why do children learn languages well, when even adults who want to learn them have trouble with them? Innate
abilities aside, children have a number of powerful advantages:
x They can devote almost their full time to it. Adults consider half an hour's study a day to be onerous.
x Their motivation is intense. Adults rarely have to spend much of their time in the company of people they
need to talk to but can't; children can get very little of what they want without learning language(s).
If adults could be placed in a similar situation, they might well learn languages as readily (I don't say 'easily'!) as
children. The closest such situation I can think of is cross- cultural marriage. And indeed, this works quite well. My
wife, for instance, a native Spanish speaker who came here in her late 20s, has learned exceptional English, since we
speak it at home. By contrast, some of her Spanish-speaking friends of the same age, married to other Spanish
speakers, speak English haltingly and with a strong accent
876 Babak Ghasemi and Masoud Hashemi / Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 28 (2011) 872 – 876
2. Conclusion
English language should be more than one course and it can be used as a scientific language and other training
courses.For example, science courses, history, social or biology should be taught in English. In this way, power and
speed of learning the language significantly increases. Primary school and children is the best course to learn the
language. Because learning the language with native language in the first decade of life provides for disabled
students to independently and directs language without translation, interpretation and changes its meaning from
Persian to learn English in your mind. This means that the person will be able to speak like native language without
including Persian to English in your mind . Early childhood is the best time for language acquisition. Ease of
learning a foreign language diminishes with age. Between birth and adolescence the brain is hard-wired to acquire
language naturally. As child approaches puberty, the nature of language learning and storage changes, becoming less
flexible. Many experts believe that learning the language before the age of ten years allow children to speak correct
and fluent as an indigenous person. Therefore, whatever the earlier children become familiar with foreign language,
he have better chance to speak proficiency. On the other hand language learning, except native language, can
provide develop a lifelong ability to more communicate with others.
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Ferreira, F., & Morrison, F. J. (1994). Children’s metalinguistic knowledge of syntactical constituents: Effects of age and schooling.
Developmental Psychology, 30, 663-678.
Hart, B., & Risley, T.R. (1995). Meaningful differences in the everyday experience of young American children. Baltimore, MD: Paul H.
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Harrison, B., & Papa, R. (2005). The development of an indigenous knowledge programme in a New Zealand Maori-language immersion school.
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This study aims to determine the effectiveness of the usage of the Canva media utility to enhance students' writing abilties. Researchers used a quantitative method that's a pre-experimental research design by making use of pre-test and post-test. Written exams are used to gather scholar fulfillment as an tool of this studies. The researchers used two classes in the 9th grade of junior high school as research samples. Dedication of the sample of this have a look at the use of random sampling method. To investigate studies facts, researchers used the t-test. Primarily based at the studies evaluation, the common score of the students' writing take a look at for the remedy magnificence in the post-test changed into (85.25), and the pre-test turned into (65.50). For the non-treatment class (61.00) for the pre-test at consequences. For the post-test only got (61.25). The effects also show that the T-test fee (9.185) is better than desk (1.824), at a significance degree of 5%. If the t-test a look at consequences are better than the t-desk. It suggests that the alternative hypothesis (Ha) was accepted and (Ho) was rejected. Primarily based at the consequences of t-test calculations, it has a look at can be concluded that the Canva utility is an powerful medium for facilitating students in improving their writing performance of descriptive text. For similarly examine, English teacher can apply as the basic principle in this study as a attention for teaching writing capabilities. And will be a benefit later for the future.
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This study used the school cut off methodology to examine the development of children's metalinguistic knowledge of the syntactic subject of a sentence. Two groups of children matched in age and background variables but differing in amount of schooling were tested at ages 5, 6, and 7. The children's task was to listen to a sentence and repeat either the subject or the subject and verb. The subject was a pronoun, a proper name, a 2-word sequence, or a 3-word sequence. Children at the age of 5 had difficulty accurately repeating the pronominal and longest subjects. Children's ability to isolate the pronoun improved as they became older, not as they became more schooled; in contrast, children's ability to handle the longest subjects improved as the children acquired more schooling. Children's metalinguistic knowledge that pronouns are independent words emerges as a normal part of linguistic development. Children's ability to deal with the longest subjects reflects their ability to manage working memory, which improves as a result of schooling. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved)
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In 1985, Te Wharekura o Rakaumangamanga initiated a Maori-language immersion program for children ages 5 through 18. In recent years, a program based on Waikato-Tainui tribal epistemology has been incorporated into the language immersion program. This article describes the community context and the language immersion and tribal knowledge programs. We consider the relationship of these programs to individual and tribal self-determination and to theories of minority achievement, particularly the work of John Ogbu.
Raising a bilingual child Applying Instructional technologies. Foreign Language Annals
  • A S Honig
Honig, A. S. (n.d.). Raising a bilingual child. Retrieved January 21, 2005, from www.scholastic.com/earlylearner/experts/language/0_2_bilingualch.htm Pusack, J. P., & Otto, S. K. (1990). Applying Instructional technologies. Foreign Language Annals, 23(5), 409-417.
Young children's literacy in multilingual classrooms: Comparing developments in South Africa and the UK
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Bloch, C., & Edwards, V. (1999). Young children's literacy in multilingual classrooms: Comparing developments in South Africa and the UK. In L. Limage (Ed.), Comparative perspectives on language and literacy: Selected papers from the work of the Language and Literacy Commission on the 10th World Congress of Comparative Education Societies. Dakar: UNESCO/BREDA.
Raising a bilingual child
  • A S Honig
Honig, A. S. (n.d.). Raising a bilingual child. Retrieved January 21, 2005, from www.scholastic.com/earlylearner/experts/language/0_2_bilingualch.htm