La Piccola Scuola Italiana di San Francisco

Resources

TIPS ON BILINGUALISM:

BE CONSISTENT

  • Choose a pattern and go with it.
  • Parents need this discipline/structure even more than the children.
  • Children can learn two or more languages even in chaos, but a reasonable amount of consistency makes their job much easier.
  • Once children learn the pattern, they are often disturbed if a parent breaks it.

PROVIDE A LINGUISTICALLY RICH ENVIRONMENT

  • Fill your days with songs, bedtime stories, chitchat and conversation in both languages, including time with native speakers as much as possible.
  • This can mean an extra demand on your time and energy.
  • Use books, audiotapes and CDs, videotapes and DVDs, and bilingual or immersion language programs.

RECOGNIZE CHILDREN’S EMOTIONAL NEEDS

  • Children should not be forced into bilingualism.
  • Children should not be asked to “show off.” This can embarrass children and can make them feel different, casting a lingering negative pall on their bilingualism.
  • Do not make drastic abrupt changes in your child’s language environment, such as suddenly speaking only a language that you have not used with your child before. This can be quite stressful, especially if the shock comes from the primary caregiver or parent. Introduce a new language with a gradual steady change instead.

RELAX

  • The more you make bilingualism seem like a natural and unremarkable part of family life, the more likely your children are to enjoy being bilingual.

IF YOUR CHILD HAS LANGUAGE DELAYS

You do not necessarily have to raise your child monolingually. Even children with Down’s Syndrome and other pronounced learning differences successfully become bilingual.

The two most important points are:

  • Speak to your child in a way that feels natural and that you can sustain for a long period of time.
  • Try to be as consistent as possible in the way that you expose your child to the two languages. 

Bilingual and Language Education Information

Bilingual Families

http://www.nethelp.no/cindy/biling-fam.html

Bilingual Parenting

http://www.ncela.gwu.edu/links/parenting.htm

Bilingual Education Supplies

http://www.bilingual-supplies.co.uk/newweblinks.html


Italian Language/Education Resources

Italian Embassy

http://www.italyemb.org/ItalianLanguage.htm

Fables and Nursery Rhymes

http://www.vicenzanews.it/manuali/favole/indice.htm
http://www.filastrocche.it

Sites in Italian

http://www.top100kids.com/index.htm
http://www.bimbi.it

Books and Videos

http://www.internetbookshop.it

Italian language school in Florence

http://www.spiritoitaliano.com


Reggio/Pistoia Information

Reggio Emilia info

http://olivepressbooks.com

Pistoia Preschool services

http://www.comune.pistoia.it/comune/uffici/area3/educazione.htm


General info about young children and/or child care

Families and Work Institute

http://www.familiesandwork.org

WestEd: research, development, and service agency

http://www.wested.org

ZERO TO THREE

http://www.zerotothree.org

National Association for the Education of Young Children

http://www.naeyc.org

Children's Council of San Francisco

http://www.childrenscouncil.org

California Community Care & Licensing

http://ccld.ca.gov

Wu Yee Children's Services

http://www.wuyee.org

Family Child Care San Francisco

http://familychildcaresf.org

Breastfeeding Information in Italian

http://www.lalecheleague.org/Lang/LangItaliano.html

SF Early Childhood Professional Development Project

http://sfchildnet.org


Art/Project/Activity Ideas and Resources

The Best Play Dough Recipes Ever

http://www.mcps.k12.md.us/curriculum/pep/playdo.htm

 

500 De Haro Street, San Francisco, CA 94107, T 415-558-9006, director@lpsisf.org

Copyright 2007 La PIccola Scuola Italiana di San Francisco. All rights reserved.