Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These discussions always seem to treat fluency in a foreign language like some mysterious, all-or-nothing proposition that is not worth undertaking if it is not done perfectly from the get-go - with very little understanding of how speaking more than one language actually functions, or how many different ways there are to be proficient in a language.
As far as i'm concerned, giving kids exposure and the building blocks to learn other languages early on is a good thing; it's been proven to be a good thing; and bilingual education does that. Some kids are going to attain higher levels of fluency than others, because some people are simply better at languages than others. Good luck controlling that.
Because, come on, the vast majority of us have taken YEARS of foreign language study through school and still never became fluent in it and never use it now.
I started Spanish in middle school and took it every year through college. I did a study abroad semester in Peru. My Spanish did become conversational at one point but then I stopped using it in my every day life and now, over a decade later, it's mostly lost. I could use it to get around on a trip but nothing more than that.
If you don't use it at home or at work in your every day life, what is the point? It was wasted effort. It came to nothing.
This is what parents are wondering about YY when they don't speak Chinese themselves and so can't support it at home.
Because you don't know at age 8 what you are going to do or be. By your reasoning, kids who aren't going to be recruited for college soccer shouldn't bother with travel, a chunky preschooler should never take ballet, and art class is a complete waste of time if you don't have any talent.
I'm sorry you regret studying Spanish, of all things, but your experience is not universal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These discussions always seem to treat fluency in a foreign language like some mysterious, all-or-nothing proposition that is not worth undertaking if it is not done perfectly from the get-go - with very little understanding of how speaking more than one language actually functions, or how many different ways there are to be proficient in a language.
As far as i'm concerned, giving kids exposure and the building blocks to learn other languages early on is a good thing; it's been proven to be a good thing; and bilingual education does that. Some kids are going to attain higher levels of fluency than others, because some people are simply better at languages than others. Good luck controlling that.
Sounds peachy PP, but the inconvenient truth is that YY kids are only getting around 50% as much instruction in English as peers who aren't in immersion programs while learning a language that at least 95% of the families can't reinforce at home, and the minority of the kids are unlikely to use as teens let alone adults. The building blocks come at too high a price, much too high. All or nothing propositions are not the issue.
Fluency is a misnomer in this context. The great majority of upper grades YY kids speak Chinese minimally - there is no level of fluency involved. That's why we bailed on the school. You get slammed on these threads for calling a spade a spade when the dismal results are painfully obvious to any native speaker of any dialect of Chinese. Most YY parents may love the arrangement, but it seems ludicrous to this parent whose kids do speak Chinese fluently, and score 5s on the PARCC ELA every year they take it at our DCPS. We avoid conversations about Chinese instruction with YY families to minimize the risk of offense. Call me and other posters who point out obvious truths "haters" if it makes you feel better. Problem is, we're right (as YY Chinese teachers know) and, to my knowledge, there's no fix on the horizon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These discussions always seem to treat fluency in a foreign language like some mysterious, all-or-nothing proposition that is not worth undertaking if it is not done perfectly from the get-go - with very little understanding of how speaking more than one language actually functions, or how many different ways there are to be proficient in a language.
As far as i'm concerned, giving kids exposure and the building blocks to learn other languages early on is a good thing; it's been proven to be a good thing; and bilingual education does that. Some kids are going to attain higher levels of fluency than others, because some people are simply better at languages than others. Good luck controlling that.
Because, come on, the vast majority of us have taken YEARS of foreign language study through school and still never became fluent in it and never use it now.
I started Spanish in middle school and took it every year through college. I did a study abroad semester in Peru. My Spanish did become conversational at one point but then I stopped using it in my every day life and now, over a decade later, it's mostly lost. I could use it to get around on a trip but nothing more than that.
If you don't use it at home or at work in your every day life, what is the point? It was wasted effort. It came to nothing.
This is what parents are wondering about YY when they don't speak Chinese themselves and so can't support it at home.
Anonymous wrote:These discussions always seem to treat fluency in a foreign language like some mysterious, all-or-nothing proposition that is not worth undertaking if it is not done perfectly from the get-go - with very little understanding of how speaking more than one language actually functions, or how many different ways there are to be proficient in a language.
As far as i'm concerned, giving kids exposure and the building blocks to learn other languages early on is a good thing; it's been proven to be a good thing; and bilingual education does that. Some kids are going to attain higher levels of fluency than others, because some people are simply better at languages than others. Good luck controlling that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I simply don't see what the problem is with second language exposure from a young age, whether partial or full. I'm sorry but I'm just not worried about English language acquisition or success. I don't buy the Canadian academic's lecture above (and why is that person even on this board? snooping about the net much?). Exposure to a second language, whether fully acquired, practiced at home, or not, cannot be a problem unless perhaps the child has certain special needs. What I would give to have had that exposure before, say, high school. That child is not only learning language, they are learning multiculturalism and this is worth it. If the child is not writing and reading up to par by say, middle school, that's when to hire an English tutor. Not to fret about the value of immersion schools at a young age. This is a huge privilege of access to DC charters and it's no wonder the immersion schools have waitlists miles long.
I'm with you, and the whole Trump Administration. To heck with evidence-based decisions. Honestly, don't fret about anything that's been researched, proven or published. I make a point of hiring multiculturalism majors before others myself, at the Taiwanese-run tech firm where I work. But wait, you don't have a kid enrolled in a DC charter immersion program whose target language you don't speak? Come now, where's your skin in the game? Where's your street cred?
Mile-long waitlists have a little something to do with neighborhood schools with proficiency pass rates in the teens, twenties, and, if you're lucky, thirties or forties, along with 7-figure prices for 3 and 4-bedroom renovated houses in the JKLM and Brent zones.
There is plenty of data on the benefits of second languages for children. I'm sorry it doesn't fit whatever narrative you're pushing. The canadian takeaway was that there might be a cost in terms of native language proficiency (on university admission exams, maybe? can't remember). There isn't convincing evidence that there is active "harm" being done by these programs and there certainly are other benefits. This is one of the results of our school choice culture, right? JKLM parent made one choice; there are native Chinese speakers who have kids at YY and live in JKLM/Brent who have made a different choice.
My narrative is high-performing immersion language programs in this city, as in my native California. Former YY parent (we left four years ago, but keep up with most of the native speakers we got to know there). There are actually very few native Chinese speakers in the YY community (ABCs or Asian nationals who grew up speaking Chinese fluently). By my count, there are no more than a dozen at any given time, and only around half speak their dialect to their children and require them to answer in Chinese. There are more Chinese native speakers at our DCPS, along with more kids who speak good Chinese at home.
YY mainly attracts parents from outside the Deal/Wilson District who sign up to get on a path to 12th grade at DCI, rather than for the Chinese. I understand their choice of YY and DCI in face of lousy DCPS options, but when PPs come to DCUM to defend the honor of the school claiming that most of the families take the immersion seriously, some of us challenge. YY could actually do a lot to improve outputs for spoken Chinese. For example, the school could threaten to bump all the kids who can't speak to a reasonably high standard off their immersion track and onto their non-immersion track, while offering strong speaking support to stragglers to raise standards, BASIS end-of-year comprehensive exams style. They could also offer summer immersion camp and full immersion after care to raise standards for speaking.
When you enroll your kid in a public immersion Chinese program supported by your tax dollars only to discover that your 5 year-old speaks better Chinese than most of the 4th and 5th graders, something's wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I simply don't see what the problem is with second language exposure from a young age, whether partial or full. I'm sorry but I'm just not worried about English language acquisition or success. I don't buy the Canadian academic's lecture above (and why is that person even on this board? snooping about the net much?). Exposure to a second language, whether fully acquired, practiced at home, or not, cannot be a problem unless perhaps the child has certain special needs. What I would give to have had that exposure before, say, high school. That child is not only learning language, they are learning multiculturalism and this is worth it. If the child is not writing and reading up to par by say, middle school, that's when to hire an English tutor. Not to fret about the value of immersion schools at a young age. This is a huge privilege of access to DC charters and it's no wonder the immersion schools have waitlists miles long.
I'm with you, and the whole Trump Administration. To heck with evidence-based decisions. Honestly, don't fret about anything that's been researched, proven or published. I make a point of hiring multiculturalism majors before others myself, at the Taiwanese-run tech firm where I work. But wait, you don't have a kid enrolled in a DC charter immersion program whose target language you don't speak? Come now, where's your skin in the game? Where's your street cred?
Mile-long waitlists have a little something to do with neighborhood schools with proficiency pass rates in the teens, twenties, and, if you're lucky, thirties or forties, along with 7-figure prices for 3 and 4-bedroom renovated houses in the JKLM and Brent zones.
There is plenty of data on the benefits of second languages for children. I'm sorry it doesn't fit whatever narrative you're pushing. The canadian takeaway was that there might be a cost in terms of native language proficiency (on university admission exams, maybe? can't remember). There isn't convincing evidence that there is active "harm" being done by these programs and there certainly are other benefits. This is one of the results of our school choice culture, right? JKLM parent made one choice; there are native Chinese speakers who have kids at YY and live in JKLM/Brent who have made a different choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It comes up because a lot of parents wonder what the point of doing it is l, if a.) you’re risking your kid not understanding the fundamentals really well because they’re being taught in a foreign language and b.) the odds are that your child will never become fluent anyway.
Yes, this is my basic concern. A couple years later, the ephemeral language gains are mostly lost, and the sum total of it might just be lost time on core subjects. I know there could be a lot of huffing about boiling it down to this but... if you're a teenager without Chinese speaking context, little language ability anyway, and a need to spend your time on your subjects or grades....could you really say it was worth it?
It's unclear enough to me to say, "Nah."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I simply don't see what the problem is with second language exposure from a young age, whether partial or full. I'm sorry but I'm just not worried about English language acquisition or success. I don't buy the Canadian academic's lecture above (and why is that person even on this board? snooping about the net much?). Exposure to a second language, whether fully acquired, practiced at home, or not, cannot be a problem unless perhaps the child has certain special needs. What I would give to have had that exposure before, say, high school. That child is not only learning language, they are learning multiculturalism and this is worth it. If the child is not writing and reading up to par by say, middle school, that's when to hire an English tutor. Not to fret about the value of immersion schools at a young age. This is a huge privilege of access to DC charters and it's no wonder the immersion schools have waitlists miles long.
I'm with you, and the whole Trump Administration. To heck with evidence-based decisions. Honestly, don't fret about anything that's been researched, proven or published. I make a point of hiring multiculturalism majors before others myself, at the Taiwanese-run tech firm where I work. But wait, you don't have a kid enrolled in a DC charter immersion program whose target language you don't speak? Come now, where's your skin in the game? Where's your street cred?
Mile-long waitlists have a little something to do with neighborhood schools with proficiency pass rates in the teens, twenties, and, if you're lucky, thirties or forties, along with 7-figure prices for 3 and 4-bedroom renovated houses in the JKLM and Brent zones.
Anonymous wrote:I simply don't see what the problem is with second language exposure from a young age, whether partial or full. I'm sorry but I'm just not worried about English language acquisition or success. I don't buy the Canadian academic's lecture above (and why is that person even on this board? snooping about the net much?). Exposure to a second language, whether fully acquired, practiced at home, or not, cannot be a problem unless perhaps the child has certain special needs. What I would give to have had that exposure before, say, high school. That child is not only learning language, they are learning multiculturalism and this is worth it. If the child is not writing and reading up to par by say, middle school, that's when to hire an English tutor. Not to fret about the value of immersion schools at a young age. This is a huge privilege of access to DC charters and it's no wonder the immersion schools have waitlists miles long.
Anonymous wrote:I am a Chinese national, a graduate student in DC with a young family, who is not out of touch.
I have been tutoring 2 YY students (siblings), for the past 2 years on a weekly basis when school is in session. The money is good and I am grateful for the work. Their parents tell me that they are among the best Mandarin speakers in their classes.
I volunteered at YY at an event last month, where I spoke to dozens of kids in Mandarin (my 3rd dialect, but the one I have used in my studies since age 5). Sorry, but the YY students' Chinese is really basic. They do not seem able to say things they have not been specifically trained to say by teachers. The odd kid speaks a little better than the others, but no student I've spoken to is anywhere near fluent. Some of the kids have good tones, many do not.
We rent a small apartment IB for a good DCPS to avoid charter schools.