Yes, I know. It's immerion in two languages, plus exposure (maybe) to a third. Not all DCI students will take a third language at all. |
Although it's an elective, most WIS students take the Chinese class starting in 6th grade. They can study the language more intensely in high school with a private tutor. Many WIS students will have the time and resources (their parents) to become trilingual (I.e., private tutors, study abroad, etc.). |
My kid is trilingual. Spanish nanny since birth then HRCS immersion. At three French tutoring and at four French immersion nanny. Monolingual English parents. All summer camps are immersion. It can be done, but isn't cheap and my kid doesn't like it. He'll thank me later, I hope. |
Umm not true. You have your target language from the feeder, then the English language, and then a second foreign language. Trilingual. |
At best, bilingual. Taking a class in a third language, starting in middle school, does NOT make one trilingual. |
Maybe not trilingual but certainly proficient in the third language. Know lots of people who took a language in college and ended up proficient, close to bilingual. Not sure why you think everyone has to take a language starting in elementary school to end up bilingual. |
I am white American, but I spent some early years of my life in Latin America. Moved back to the U.S. When I was 5ish. I had Spanish au pairs and when I got to high school, I took IB French, got a 5 on the exam, minored in French in college and studied abroad. I became completely fluent and most French speakers have no idea that I am not French. I managed to retain my excellent Spanish accent that I got when I was 4 and in a "total immersion setting". Just saying, it can definitely be done. If you learn Spanish and have a truely bilingual education and then learn another language later- you can definitely become trilingual like me. I don't think it's very hard. If you're rich enough to support the language (au pairs, foreign summer camps, vacations, tutors if necessary), you can have a Trilingual kid for sure.
Side note- not sure why people keep posting about wis. I was strongly considering it for my kids but declined to even apply for many reasons. No point in discussing them here because it's the PUBLIC schools forum, but it's a ton of money and it has its issues. Before everyone here automatically thinks WIS is the be all end all, do some research on the private school section. |
LOL. Has your kid changed his thoughts since this post? |
PS. A 5 on IB French as you indicated is basically a B-. IB exams are on a scale from 1-7. |
Did you miss the part where she then continued her French studies and THEN became fluent? |
And much more serious language tracks than DCI. WIS costs a bomb, but they do immersion right (with many native speaking kids enrolled). |
Totally agree on your assessment of WIS. No need to discuss it here but it is not a school I would hold up as a good example. It has lots of issues. Check out the private schools forum before you begin raving. |