Anonymous wrote:We are bilingual. We do try to talk our language at home but we use English also and have tried to converse mostly in our language. They reply in English. Our kids attend our language class but we have complaints that they never pay attention in class and just do whatever they want to do since they do not understand what is being spoken. They are not even trying. Spouse does not care if they learn the language or not. It took me almost 2 hours to teach 4 easy rhyming sentences that were already taught in class ( it was basically the same sentence with only the first word changing each time) and yet they don't remember. I don't think I can continue like that. I am losing my sanity whenever I try to teach our language. Nothing seems to work and I am just ready to give up. How do you handle this? Do you hire a tutor for the language to do one on one. Any experiences with this? Kids are in ES.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:@12:35 I also feel that it is a disrespect issue when they do not listen to the teachers in language school. I have disciplined them (no TV time that day etc), but the teacher also feels that it is because they do not understand what is being spoken so they just do something else.
If they can listen to their teacher in ES, I'm not sure why they behave differently in language school.
I'm 12:35.
I volunteer at my children's American public school, where we have many ESOL students from abroad, and they all listen quietly, even if most of the info passes over their heads. It's definitely a respect issue, OP. In my children's French language school, I've noticed that some teachers are not great at disciplining students, because they're French and used to the French system where the administration will punish kids for misbehaving. Here parental expectations are different and there is no such recourse. So some kids misbehave because of that, and because they've divined that it's "just" native language school and that it's less important somehow.
You have to make it important in their eyes. Reward effort and good academic progression, punish slacking off.
Anonymous wrote:@12:35 I also feel that it is a disrespect issue when they do not listen to the teachers in language school. I have disciplined them (no TV time that day etc), but the teacher also feels that it is because they do not understand what is being spoken so they just do something else.
If they can listen to their teacher in ES, I'm not sure why they behave differently in language school.
Anonymous wrote:
Hi OP,
Is this a sudden development or was it a gradual transition? Were your kids ever willing to speak your language. Have they ever been able to memorize rhymes? What about when the older one was an only child? What you are describing is something where you are teaching an ES kid a new language, not a situation where your kids already have a familiarity with your native language.
Anonymous wrote:We are bilingual. We do try to talk our language at home but we use English also and have tried to converse mostly in our language. They reply in English. Our kids attend our language class but we have complaints that they never pay attention in class and just do whatever they want to do since they do not understand what is being spoken. They are not even trying. Spouse does not care if they learn the language or not. It took me almost 2 hours to teach 4 easy rhyming sentences that were already taught in class ( it was basically the same sentence with only the first word changing each time) and yet they don't remember. I don't think I can continue like that. I am losing my sanity whenever I try to teach our language. Nothing seems to work and I am just ready to give up. How do you handle this? Do you hire a tutor for the language to do one on one. Any experiences with this? Kids are in ES.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I was a kid where my parents spoke a second language at home but I lost it. It's common, it goes like this: the kids speak and understand it just fine before they go to school. Once they enter school, they start wanting to speak English more (it's what they speak all day at school, it's easier to keep using it than switch back at home, sometimes it seems "uncool" to speak that language). So you end up in a situation where you speak the second language to them and they reply in English.
They will have perfect understanding, but eventually will lose the ability to speak even if they wanted to. The brain is very weird: if I thought to myself, I want to say "there is a red car and a blue car on the street in front of me" in my parents' language, I cannot think of the words or how to say it. My mind just draws a blank. But if someone said that to me in that language, I know what was said. Must be something about brain pathways.
I regret not keeping up with that language; your kids probably will too as adults but it's hard for kids to understand. Maybe take them to travel in a country where they speak that language or try making it a game where you have to keep conversation going and first one to switch to english loses?