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Home›Equity›Should Bi-Lingual Learning be Required?

Should Bi-Lingual Learning be Required?

By Matthew Lynch
February 28, 2015
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This generation of K-12 students is growing up in a society that is increasingly bi-lingual. Foreign language requirements have long been a core requirement for high school graduation and are also part of most arts-based college degree programs. Along with Spanish, languages like French and German are common options for students.

But just how “foreign” is Spanish in today’s society? The U.S. Census estimates that there are 50.5 million Hispanic people living in America, and another 3.7 who are residents of Puerto Rico. This number represents a 43 percent increase in the recorded Hispanic population from 2000 to 2010 at a rate four times faster than the rest of the U.S. population. Further, 35 million children 5 and over spoke Spanish at home in 2010. English as a second language K-12 programs have existed for decades, but maybe that program should be expanded.

Should English-speaking K-12 students be required to learn Spanish? Let’s take that question one step further: should bilingual learning be part of every U.S. classroom, no matter what the subject?

Some individual school districts have already taken the initiative to make dual-language programs a reality. The Irving Independent School District in Texas started a bilingual elementary program 10 years ago. Students can opt to learn in an environment that is taught 50 percent in English and 50 percent in Spanish. In Irving, 70 percent of the student population is Hispanic. Critics of the program cite the usual reason that my grandmother may have listed against American students learning a foreign language in school classrooms: Americans should speak ENGLISH. There is also some concern about whether each language can truly be mastered if it is sharing classroom time with the other.

Studies in language development, however, show that the more exposure young children have to all languages actually gives them a distinct academic advantage throughout life. Bilingual children are able to focus more intently on the topics at hand and avoid distractions from academic pursuits. They are also able to demonstrate higher levels of cognitive flexibility, or the ability to change responses based on environment and circumstances.

For children to truly see the full potential multi-lingualism has on learning, exposure to non-native languages should actually begin long before Kindergarten. Even children who learn their first Spanish words at the age of 5 can benefit from dual language curriculum though. Learning is learning. The more that children can take advantage of new concepts, the more in tune their brains will be to all learning throughout life. Some studies have also found that the aging of the brain is slower and the employment rate is higher in adults with bilingual capabilities. Why not set kids up for success and strengthen long-term brain health while we are at it?

The benefits to having a bilingual brain

There are also the cultural benefits to children learning two languages together. The children who come from English-speaking homes can lend their language expertise to friends from Spanish-speaking homes, and vice versa. Contemporary communication technology has eliminated many global barriers when it comes to socialization and even doing business. It makes sense that language boundaries should also come down and with help from our K-12 education system.

Dual language programs show students a broader world view, whatever the native language of the student, and lead to greater opportunities for collaborative learning. We should not limit what children learn based on outdated principles masked in patriotism. All K-12 students should have Spanish and English fluency by graduation.

What is your opinion on mandating bi-lingual education programs in the future?

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10 comments

  1. HeidiBelt 26 April, 2014 at 14:49 Reply

    Yes…oh yes…teaching an additional language in early elementary makes a whole heck of a lot of sense!!! As a parent with European anscestry raising three adopted children with hispanic anscenstry, I’m very cognisant of the need for these children to learn Spanish early in life. Understanding the culture and language they came from is very important to us! Giving these kids the ability to be bilingual is our goal. Would we consider sending our children to a bilingual school if it were in our school district? Yep. . . in a “New York” minute!

  2. hollysuel 27 April, 2014 at 18:10 Reply

    I wrote a paper in graduate school about how American schools are falling behind because of its gross negligence in foreign language education. Students in other countries have to get to a certain level of English in order to graduate high school and enter university whereas students in the USA aren’t even required to study a foreign language let alone learn it to the degree they can actually use it. I really hope that the US education system changes and more students are able to take advantage of bilingual education.

  3. BananaMan54 27 April, 2014 at 23:24 Reply

    To mandate dual language learning for students in all subjects would be the most effective approach from a language perspective and it would provide a better education — But to do so would require a radical commitment to the concept from the Board down, and severe re-alignment or duplication of teaching staff. Can you imagine the hue and cry from long-time teachers that only know English if they had to become proficient in a second language or see their job go away or be reduced to part-time? Can you imagine the resistance from the taxpayer for the expense of such a program? Most school districts will continue to require a series of second language courses, and of these the better districts will work diligently to make this series of classes as effective as possible.

  4. AftonChristine 28 April, 2014 at 02:03 Reply

    Not to be the money commentor all the time, but this will never fly. There will never be enough money to get bi-lingual education in our public schools. In my area there are several bi-lingual charter schools students may attend. But for the main-stream public school to go bi-lingual. . . not gonna happen.

  5. lawrence 27 July, 2014 at 05:19 Reply

    .

    áëàãîäàðñòâóþ!

  6. sarahrose00 18 September, 2014 at 20:24 Reply

    I definitely agree it should be an elective and I agree that dual language is a good thing. Mandating it is a good idea in theory, but I’m not sure it’s the way to best way to go.

    • Eric 19 March, 2016 at 19:59 Reply

      Totally agreed.

  7. edmom5 21 September, 2014 at 09:11 Reply

    English should be required. That’s the language of the country! Let kids learn other languages as electives or at home.

  8. LiberalEd 21 September, 2014 at 09:29 Reply

    Wow EdMom – are you kidding me? Language learning isn’t about the dominant language or hoarding that language over people who are different. It is about allowing the brains of children to grow even more than they would without that other language. Science has proved this time and again. I think that all kids and adults would benefit from embracing other languages and cultures, instead of just cutting them down.

  9. divaker01 10 October, 2015 at 23:31 Reply

    In India, we have more than 20 official languages. I learnt three languages(to read, write) in school and two more in home. With this exposure, we have much control on vocabulary on the language we choose to speak or write. Also, it is proven that early access to learn more than one language improvises our IQ

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