--"Multilingual."
"What do you call someone who speaks two languages?"
--"Bilingual."
"What do you call someone who only speaks one language?"
--"American."
Sadly, that joke contains an element of truth, and I think that one reason that so few people in the United States are fluent in other languages is that, in most cases, there is no serious study of other languages until high school. Although many schools offer it in elementary and middle school, there is often an unspoken assumption that the kids can't really learn much--just numbers, colors, maybe the names of some animals or parts of the body.
After fifteen years of teaching college students and seeing first-hand how challenging it is for students who wait to learn another language as an adult, I cannot describe my joy when Mrs. Scalet described the program here at All Saints. Our students have Spanish at least twice a week from pre-K on. That frequency allows us to go beyond a few basic nouns. The children here are actually speaking Spanish, with oral sections on every test from the third grade and up. We aren't just going over isolated nouns--they are conjugating verbs and using prepositions and the correct gender of adjectives to create complete sentences.
Excellent work from Samantha, 4-B |
To give you some perspective on this, most of the college Spanish programs that I know don't teach this until about the third or fourth chapter, and then we typically see students struggling to remember to use the definite article to express doing something on a certain day, or forgetting to contract a and el to make al for masculine destinations or mixing up the gender. These third and fourth grade students sailed through it without any problems at all (and they even remembered the accent marks on miércoles and sábado--those little things that delight the hearts of Spanish teachers everywhere).
Caitlin and Austin practicing the places with a board game. |
Dani, Taylor and Ariana were the fastest group to find all the words in the sentence, and JP is the fastest photo-bomber. :) |
Jake, Nick and Owen |
Kids have such a great way of living up or down to the expectations and opportunities given to them! When you expect excellence and give them the chance to learn more, they rise to the occasion. I look forward to the day when students all over the US have a chance to really learn other languages, and I am delighted that we don't have to wait for that here at All Saints.