Toddlers can learn second language at 20 months
By ANIWednesday, September 9, 2009
LONDON - Toddlers are able to learn a second language from the age of 20 months, just as they are still learning their own native tongue, says a new study.
At that age the tots’ minds are developed enough to learn basic language skills but are not sufficiently tuned in to one language ahead of another.
Researchers at Paris Descartes University suggested that 20 months is the age at which children in bilingual homes begin to become proficient in both tongues, reports The Daily Express.
In their study, boffins were trying to get French children to understand simple instructions in English.
All of the 24 youngsters came from homes where only French was spoken, said the team.
The instructions, such as telling them to put a ball in a cup, included words they had yet to learn in French as well as English.
The results, published in the journal Infant Behaviour and Development, showed the babies picking up the English as quickly as the French instructions.
Researchers said the study showed that “20-month-olds have developed mature word learning mechanisms”. (ANI)
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September 15, 2009: 7:23 am
There are thousands upon thousands of words in the English language. I have heard it said that the average person who grows up under the English language must learn an average of 20-30 words per day beginning with his or her first day in this world and continuing until the age of 18! Wow, how much we have learned and the majority of this learning was probably not in a formal teacher-student environment. |
Robert