Anonymous wrote:we're not at bambini but go to full time spanish immersion...it's fantastic. neither parent is a spanish speaker. they pick up very quickly.
Anonymous wrote:Bambini teachers only speak Spanish to the kids. It's a wonderful place that I'd highly recommend, but it really helps if you speak some Spanish because only one teacher per classroom knows English. Just FYI also - they do not have dedicated outdoor space. Pre-COVID it wasn't a problem because they did so many fun outings, but during COVID it means that kids are indoors all day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But I read OP as saying her son does not currently speak any English? If that's true, I would want him in an English speaking daycare to be ready for PK3, which I think would be very hard if the kid went in speaking no English (unless you would only send to an immersion program).
Our preschool is chock full of diplomat/IMF/World Bank kids who spoke no English at all until they started preschool at age 3-4. They all pick it up in a week. And then they go home and speak it to their siblings! So the siblings arrive at school already knowing English even when the parents speak 100% in their native language and don’t allow any English media. English is going to find its way into your kids’ brain no matter what you do, so it shouldn’t be a thing you stress about.
Which preschool?
Anonymous wrote:But I read OP as saying her son does not currently speak any English? If that's true, I would want him in an English speaking daycare to be ready for PK3, which I think would be very hard if the kid went in speaking no English (unless you would only send to an immersion program).