Anonymous wrote:These threads seem to gravitate toward the idea that if a child doesn't become totally fluent, immersion programs aren't worth it. In my opinion, the exposure is fantastic for a kid regardless of the degree of fluency. I started French when I was 8 and didn't have anything like immersion, but taking those classes gave me a facility in French that I was able to develop as an adult, and a general comfort with learning languages that opened a lot of doors for me in my life. So as a parent of a child in an immersion school, I'm not that concerned about whether my kid is fluent by 5th grade -- I am just happy that he will have this tool in his arsenal.
Anonymous wrote:Looking for insight from parents of kids in immersion programs or educators/people with knowledge of educational pedagogy and how kids learn. It seems like a great idea to teach kids how to speak another language. My concern, however, is whether doing a full immersion program (like Yu Ying has in PK) inhibits kids' ability to thoroughly learn English. Have people seen kids have issues with being taught in Chinese, for example, for the whole day?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All the studies on the benefits of immersion can't alter certain inconvenient truths. Families who embrace these programs but can't support the language learning at home don't tend to get great results unless they can and will pay a bomb to supplement for years and years. If you can and will, go for it.
Nonsense. My child has scored a 5 on the ELA twice now, no supplementing. The question was about English, not another opportunity for you to bitch about Chinese.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All the studies on the benefits of immersion can't alter certain inconvenient truths. Families who embrace these programs but can't support the language learning at home don't tend to get great results unless they can and will pay a bomb to supplement for years and years. If you can and will, go for it.
Nonsense. My child has scored a 5 on the ELA twice now, no supplementing. The question was about English, not another opportunity for you to bitch about Chinese.
Anonymous wrote:All the studies on the benefits of immersion can't alter certain inconvenient truths. Families who embrace these programs but can't support the language learning at home don't tend to get great results unless they can and will pay a bomb to supplement for years and years. If you can and will, go for it.
Anonymous wrote:Among DC schools with a mixed SES study body (e.g. not IB WOTP DCPS) YY and LAMB are among the top performers in both ELA and Math.
Most research on dual language education shows that children who are in an immersion setting will be slightly behind what you might expect based on demographics in 1st-3rd, and then catch up and perhaps exceed expectations by 5th or 6th.
You do have to have a bit of faith though.