Bilingual babies become more tolerant
A study of newborn babies and preschoolers has revealed that language may be the root of prejudice - and the way to avoid it.
US and French researchers have found that the language babies hear spoken in their first six months of life leads to a preference for speakers of that language. The preference is so entrenched that by age five youngsters prefer playmates who not only speak the same language but do so with the same accent. A key implication of the findings - reported in the US publication Proceedings of the National Academy of Science - is that children exposed to different languages grow into more tolerant adults than their monolingual mates.
Linguist Stephen Crain of Sydney’s Macquarie University tended to agree: “I’ve always thought it would be beneficial to expose our children to more than one language,” he said.
Read more: Polyglots
Related posts:
- Sign Language for BabiesSign Language for Babies Recent trends have seen a move...
- Multilingual songs teach kids foreign languagesThe launch of babyboomboom’s® multilingual musical CDs struck a chord...
- The Academy for Intercultural Dialogue The Academy for Intercultural Dialogue, founded December 2007 in...
- Courts struggle to find interpreters in U.S.ASome recent events in the USA illustrate a major challenge...
- Arabic now Sydney’s no. 2 LanguageEnglish and New Zealanders still make up the largest groups...