cmwatkins wrote:Good insights, watermen. Thanks for sharing your experience!
Perhaps when his younger brother is of speaking age, we'll have some degree of built-in reinforcement.
I wonder what other sorts of out-of-the-home speaking opportunities there are. A multi-lingual school is unavailable where we live now, for example, but there's a once-weekly volunteer-run Japanese "school" for kindergarten+ age kids. Play dates with other Japanese speaking kids is probably a vital add. Any other ideas?
:: Chris Watkins ::
:: OdoriPark.com ::
In my humble opinion, a lot of parents hope their kids to be bilingual. But most of the time, those kids don't end up bilingual.
To be bilingual, it is not just the parents effort, but the kids need to make an effort too, especially living in an environment you described.
Like I said in my previous post, if the only Japanese speaking opportunity is speaking to parents, most kids will not be able to retain the language when they grow up, unless he make an effort to retain it.
As for your little boy, he will most likely end up speaking English with his brother, it is a natural course, because all their peers speak English, therefore they will too.
Most people who grown up to be bilingual naturally because they lived in a bi- or multilingual environment. It is the environment that make people learn a language, not the family.
Take a step back and think how did English become your first language?
1. Parents spoke it, so you learnt it, you learnt the basic.
2. You go to school, talk to your friends, all little kids start to interact in basic-childish English.
3. You learnt English in school, teachers taught you grammar, culture, history and archaic English etc...
4. Now your English becomes better, you watch English drama and movies etc, you start learning to speak like those actors and want to be like them, therefore speaking like them.
5. When do most people start to learn how to express themselves??? Most people learn how to express themselves when they to talk to their close friends starting at a young age, that kind of intimate talks between your buddies is what start to shape a person linguistic abilities. Even those gossips, bitching talks significantly help to shape a person linguistic abilities.
People who are bi-, multilingual by nature, because they lived in an environment that required them to use so many languages while they grow up. Imagine you lived in an area where 50% of the population speak Japanese and the another 50% speak English, your kids have both Japanese and English friends, if they don't want to be left out by either groups, they simply have to speak both languages.
But in your case, not knowing Japanese at all will not make them felt left out. In fact your kids may have peer pressure from speaking another language if he can't speak English properly. Most kids will not understand the significant of being bilingual, therefore speaking something different from his peers will make his peers think that your son is odd. If your son ever felt odd because of this reason, he may even hate to speak Japanese.
In your case, instead of forcing them to speak another language, I would rather keep emphasizing on the important and benefits for being bilingual. Let your kids decide.
If you really want them to be bilingual, then you really need to move to an environment where both Japanese and English are used. But I don't think there is any such environment in the US.
Even those kids living right in the heart of Chinatown can't really speak Chinese when they grow up. If you take a look at those little kids in chinatown and see what they speak among themselves, they speak English! Parents speak Chinese and they all reply in English. Even for those going to Chinese schools in Chinatown, they still speak English.