The op and her husband speak it 10% of the time and 90% English. So the kids will be coming home after school to more English. |
Lol, that reminds me that in 1989 we were soooo worried about Japan. I actually knew kids studying Japanese then. |
That's an opinion. My kid has fun on it. |
PP, your daughter would be an excellent candidate for a study abroad program. Encourage her to consider it someday. |
Because they weird AF |
| Let it go OP. Enjoy your children and family. Acquiring and retaining a foreign language takes intense work and constant effort. It’s not worth giving up your weekends and family life. |
| I was in a similar situation with a similarly difficult language but with much less media available in that language. Plus my American DH doesn’t speak this language. I dragged my kids to weekend lessons their entire childhoods. There were occasional times they resented it but it became such a non negotiable part of their growing up it became a routine for them. We did not give up other activities for this, it was never more than two hours a week. They didn’t learn the language perfectly but they have a strong basis. One of them is now a freshman in college and has voluntarily (and surprisingly) signed up for 5x week classes in this language. I think she sees it as a way to set herself apart. My other child is a sophomore in college and hasn’t taken the classes but he looked into it and tried to make it happen, it just didn’t work out. So he may pick it up again in the future. I don’t speak the language with them because I don’t know it very well, but I don’t regret the effort. I would have been very upset if I had just given up. |
They know how to speak the language. They need to do their part by speaking Mandarin 90% of the time instead |
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We are white so it may be a bit different but I gave up on the heritage language and I think DS will be missing out as part of family and he won’t have a community he would otherwise probably (maybe) have.
If your kids aren’t too resistant try to teach them, but if it’s a battle and you need your sanity then it is what it is. |
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Op here. I and DH do speak Mandarin Chinese if one do not judge our pronunciation and tone. Native chinese can tell that our Mandarin Chinese is not our first language, but it is good enough that they understand what we speak.
My parents, my in-laws and DH all expect me to be the one teaching our kids Mandarin Chinese because I am the mom and I can read and write even though my pronunciation in Mandarin Chinese is worse than my DH. It is a lot of work on me. I have tried to teach my kids simple chinese vocabularies, they forgot. I have tried to speak to them in Mandarin Chinese, they completely ignore me because they do not understand. My kids seem quite stupid when it comes to forenign language learning part. I do not have any strategies to teach them at home unless someone can share. They do not have the passion to learn it, so the only way is me pushing and forcing them to learn it. |
with this attitude towards own kids I can see why you don’t want to put effort. How are your kids supposed to learn if you don’t put effort? Both of you & dh, in laws? You want them to learn mandarin, then you all switch to speaking it to the kids. I may have missed if you speak English to the kids or one of your other languages? If you’re already speaking a different non-English language with the kids, then it makes it even harder cause you’re trying to teach them a third language. If so, then focus on 1 non-English language and build up that. |
| You sound ridiculous OP. Go away |
A couple of thoughts: -If your pronunciation and intonation is not good, it's not particularly helpful for them to hear you speak. It could even hurt. My parents spoke to me in their native (European) language as a child. I unfortunately did not retain it, but one thing I have is excellent pronunciation, I can roll my Rs and don't say things the American way, because I was exposed to the correct way as a child. It would probably be more helpful to your kids to just listen to movies and songs where people are speaking the language correctly. -How did you learn Mandarin? Did your parents teach you? I am guessing not since they don't speak it, so how can they expect you to teach it to your kids? You're not a native speaker, but even if you were, you're not a language teacher either. It's ok to push back on an unreasonable request. Speaking to kids once in a while in your 3rd or 4th language that you don't pronounce properly or can't read and write in (your husband) is not realistic. -Please don't call your kids stupid. This is counterintuitive. A lot of people (like me) have anxiety about speaking foreign languages. I cannot get the words out because I am second guessing what I'm saying, if I've conjugated the words correctly, if there's some grammatical exception I forgot, etc. As a result my speaking is very slow and stilted, and that makes me want to speak less and less. I realize Mandarin is different but I imagine psychologically it's the same. If you make your kids feel stupid, they will not utter one word because they don't want to be judged. They may understand more than you think, but they would rather just shut down and not participate. |
| Op here. My first language is cantonese, and it is spoken in the society and taught in public school. 70 percent of my public MS/HS school curriculum are taught in English, and that's how I learn English. I was introduced Mandarin as a class in MS for a few years, and that's how I learn Mandarin. I also take French and japanese as foreign languages as extra curriculum activities because our public school has a French teacher and a japanese teacher. I pick up one chinese dielect through my parents but they never teach me. I just sort it out by their conversations. It is quite common for a chinese to know a few languages. |
Came here to ask this. It's sort of like if one set of your grandparents spoke a Mexican indigenous language and a moderate amount of Spanish, but instead of you learning their indigenous language you took Spanish classes. It's adjacent to your heritage, but it's not exactly your heritage. |