MULTILINGUALISM
IN A PRE-PRIMARY GROUP
In the school that I work
the immigrant children are just a few and the L1 is Catalan. Although that,
there are some groups that break the rule. One of them is a class of the kindergarten
who has 2 immigrants, 2 daughters and 1 son of immigrants, and a boy who,
despite he is Spanish, speaks English with his father. Besides that, the L1
most spoken is Spanish.
This group has 26
children; 5 have Catalan as mother tongue, 2 speak Nigerian and 19 have Spanish
as L1.
The last ones started to
speak Catalan when they were in P3 and despite now they speak both, they use
Spanish when they are playing or they ask something to their classmates, but
not to the teachers.
Of this group of 19, there
are two special cases because they speak two languages at home. The first one,
speaks Spanish with her father and Portuguese with her mother; the second one,
uses Spanish with her mother and English with his father, although he is
Spanish too.
The group of 5 were able
to speak Spanish when they started school, but with a lack of fluency. Now they
have improved a lot because they have to speak it while they are playing with
their friends who have Spanish as L1.
The last group has two
girls from Nigeria; both speak Nigerian and some English, because sometimes
they use it at home. One of them are in Catalonia since she was 3 and she has
no problem with Catalan and Spanish, but the other came on April of last year and she is learning a
mix of Spanish and Catalan, but she is enhancing a lot everyday.
As you can see is not a
typical group in the school that I work because, as I said before, their mother
tongue is not Catalan and there are 2 immigrants.
The L3 in the school is
English. I’ve been working as English
teacher since 2011 and in the kindergarten they have a natural way of learning
languages. In my opinion, besides the reason said before, this group in
particular has no problems in the language learning process because they are
learning other languages at the same time since they were 3 or younger.


"Nigerian" is not a language. There are over 500 languages spoken in that nation-state. Please check it out her: http://www.ethnologue.com/country/NG/language
ResponderEliminarWhen you talk about "a natural way" are you referring to Krashen's "Natural Approach"?
ResponderEliminar