Can your child dream in multiple languages? All kids have their unique talents and skills, bilingual or multilingual children have the extra ability of speaking and expressing themselves in more than one language. What special powers does this extra language bring them?

photo: Rochambeau The French International School

At Home and on the Playground

•   Improved self-control. Switching between languages activates the same areas of the brain that are active in applying self-control. Regular exposure to multiple languages exercises and strengthens self-discipline.

•  Easier adaptation to new environments. Multilingual children understand that different languages and cultures have different rules, a concept that can help them adapt flexibly to change and a variety of social settings.

•   Stronger ties to family and culture. Children who master foreign languages maintain closer bonds with their family and culture, which can help them develop a stronger sense of identity.

•   More opportunities for making diverse friends. Speaking multiple languages allows students to connect with children from a greater variety of backgrounds and cultures.

photo: Rochambeau The French International School

At School & in the Workforce

•   Heightened focus. Multilingual children are more practiced at filtering irrelevant information and ignoring distractions. Suppressing one language to access another strengthens executive function – the ability to manage time and resources to get things done.

•   Better mastery of home language. Students who study more than one language are more familiar with the mechanics of language in general, from parts of speech to etymology.

•   Enhanced problem-solving and abstract thinking skills. Multilingual people tend to be more competent at understanding mathematical concepts, word problems, logic puzzles, and other essential STEM skills.

•   Greater competitiveness in a global and multilingual workforce. Doing business in today’s world can mean crossing cultural and linguistic borders on a daily basis. Well over half of the world’s population speaks more than one language, and many careers favor multilingual job applicants.

photo: Rochambeau The French International School

In the Community & in the World

•   Increased tolerance and empathy. Studies show a possible link between multilingualism and empathy, perhaps because speaking additional languages requires seeing from more than one perspective.

•   Enriched travel experiences. Speaking the language while exploring another country is not only practical but also makes for a more authentic and immersive cultural encounter.

•   A stronger foundation for learning other languages. Once a second language is acquired, learning additional languages will come more easily and naturally.

•   More meaningful participation in a global community. Understanding other cultures and languages fosters a deeper understanding of our complex and interconnected world – as well as our role in making it a better place.

photo: Rochambeau The French International School

What Is Important to Keep in Mind When Introducing Your Child to Another Language?

Starting early is key, even child who are not yet speaking can benefit from exposure to another language. Everyone knows children learn languages more quickly and easily than adults, so the earlier the better.

Consider multiple languages, learning to learn languages is a skill set in itself. Multiple languages if taught by native speakers can have compounded benefits. Switching between languages activates the same areas of the brain that are active in applying self-control.

Quality is critical, be sure the language instruction comes from a native speaker. Even at a young age, children can recognize the subtle nuances of a language and quality of instruction is important.

Set a goal, a new language takes time. It takes 6-7 years to be become fully fluent in a new language, plan to commit to this language for a significant period of time.

Consider an immersion program, these programs offer dedicated instruction in a new language and provide students with significant exposure to this language. Programs vary from 50% of the day to 100% of the school day in the target language. Different program models exist, most public immersion programs offer the core curriculum translated in the target language, other schools such as the French or International schools provide a dedicated curriculum blending language and culture.

photo: Rochambeau The French International School

Take It From Mom

As a mother of a 3 year old trilingual daughter (French, English, and Slovak) I see the benefits everyday. When she learns a new concept in one language she carries it over almost immediately to the other two languages. We chose to expose her to these three languages because my husband is from Slovakia and I, as a French/American, growing up in the US have always regretted not being fully proficient in both languages.  We tried our best to balance the languages so no one language was more dominant. We started early, during the first two years child care was split between a French speaking nanny and her Slovak speaking grandparents. We set the goal for her to be able to speak fluently with both sets of grandparents and she is there but we are conscious that to maintain this will take more work. We enrolled her last year at Rochambeau The French International School where 80% of her day is in French. The school teaches the French curriculum which is uniform across all French schools around the world and also has a robust English language program based on the core curriculum. We hope the priority we have placed on language learning will give her a strong sense of identity and the confidence needed to study, work, or live wherever she chooses.

Meaghan Hlinka is Admissions Associate at Rochambeau The French International School in Bethesda, MD. Interested in language acquisition, she is bilingual French/English and has studied Arabic, Turkish, and Slovak. A mom to a 3 year old daughter she feels lucky to be able to share multiple cultures with her daughter. 

For the last 25 years, TIME for Kids has been a go-to source for millions of elementary students in classrooms. When the pandemic hit and schools were forced to close, the school-based publication became available at home for the first time. Today, they launched a new premium digital subscription  designed to keep kids learning, help them understand the news and connect them to the world from home. 

TIME For Kids

“The mission of TIME for Kids is to create a safe and engaging experience for kids to explore the world on their own,” said TIME for Kids editor in chief Andrea Delbanco. “With the continued uncertainty around kids going back to school amid the coronavirus pandemic, TIME for Kids has built its first-ever home product to be flexible for the needs of all families and to provide a fun resource and tool they can turn to help support remote learning.”

The TIME for Kids subscription designed for home use includes digital access to new editions of TIME for Kids each week, as well as access to every issue of TIME for Kids that has been previously published in 2020. Every week, subscribers will also receive a special TIME for Kids newsletter to serve as a supplemental guide for the content in each new issue, with helpful curriculum, conversation guides, resources, and engaging activities to make the most out of every issue of TIME for Kids at home. Subscriptions are available beginning at $19.99 per year through an introductory offer.

This new TIME for Kids subscription is the latest offering from TIME for Kids that aims to help families, kids and teachers navigate the ongoing uncertainty around kids going back to school amid the coronavirus pandemic. Most recently, TIME for Kids unveiled a new subscription, designed specifically for teachers, that connects the print and digital TIME for Kids experiences and enables flexibility between the in-classroom and remote learning experience for students. In March, when schools initially closed due to coronavirus, TIME for Kids was made available digitally, for free, and in multiple languages including Spanish and Chinese, for the first time with the launch of the TIME for Kids digital library, which has been accessed by over 350,000 people in all 50 states across the U.S. and more than 140 countries around the world.

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: TIME For Kids

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If your kids are lacking after school activities lately, you’re not alone. In response to a survey that showed up to 40 percent of after school activities have been shut down during the pandemic, Airbnb is launching brand new Online Experiences.

The collection of Field Trips is a way for kids to experience new things from their own home and to supplement their school curriculum. Airbnb is teaming up with several special celebs to kick off the program, and first on the list is Bill Nye, Olivia Wilde and Marley Dias.

Olivia Wilde is starting with “Socially Conscious Story Hour,” followed by “Decoding The Science of 2020” with Bill Nye (the science guy) and “How to be a Social Problem Solver” with the Dias family of #1000BlackGirlBooks.

In all, over 75+ extracurricular Online Experiences await and are hosted from over 20 countries around the world. Additionally, many activities are affiliated with Classroom Champions, a nonprofit that offers curriculum and mentorship experiences for kindergarteners through eighth graders with volunteer Olympians, Paralympians and professional athletes.

The Field Trip Online Experiences range from $7 to $100 and you can find the entire catalog at airbnb.com/fieldtrips. Not only are these programs educational, but they will help others, too. All proceeds from Nye’s experience will go to The Planetary Society and all proceeds for both Wilde and Dias’s experiences will go to Boys & Girls Clubs of San Francisco.

––Karly Wood

All photos: Courtesy of Airbnb

 

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Few things are as frustrating as watching your child struggle his or her way through school. They’re putting in the time and the effort — even with your help — yet they’re still not performing their best.

You know that with the right curriculum and attention, you know they could thrive. Good news! There is help available.

Recent studies have shown that children have unique and varied approaches to learning. Accordingly, your child may not fit the traditional school model.

If this sounds like your child, they may benefit from a holistic approach to education.

Read on to learn more about this exciting new approach and how it can help your child succeed.

Taking a Holistic Approach to Education: Changing the way Your Child Learns

Understanding the Approach

Before determining whether your child needs a holistic approach to education, it’s important to understand the philosophy behind it. Holistic education has its roots in the 1800s and was popularized by Ron Miller.

Miller decided that the current education system wasn’t quite getting the job done. Children were learning, certainly, but they weren’t retaining or understanding the knowledge.

His philosophy involved a more engaging and rigorous structure. Children would still learn the basics like reading and writing, but they’d learn it in a different way.

Miller’s system was a hit.

Holistic education as we know it focuses on the development of a child in their entirety, not just their acedemic side. While a standard school will help with rote memory there’s more to development than facts.

Holistic education focuses on factors like home life, socialization, critical thinking, and religion, while helping them connect to their community, earth, and soul. Since a holistic approach to education is tailored, it will vary on the parent’s approach.

A Holistic Approach Gives Your Child the Attention They Need

“Holistic education engages the mind, heart, hands, and spirit of a child.”

At the end of the day, no child is going to thrive and succeed at every single task. Even with hours of homework and practice, children’s brains just work in a way that the traditional school system can’t understand.

For example, your child may enjoy smaller, individualized lesson plans to focus on his or her needs. This is perhaps the greatest strength of a holistic approach.

If your child struggles with writing, for instance, a holistic ed. program will assess your child’s needs and structure a plan around them — not the other way around. You’ll get the tools to write with your child and strengthen their skills. The plan becomes all about a child centred approach, not a pass/fail grade.

Socialization is Still Critical

Make no mistake, a holistic approach to education doesn’t necessarily mean homeschooling. Children thrive on socialization and play, and a holistic education understands that.

If you’re concerned that a holistic education would deprive your child of their much-needed social time, don’t worry.

There are programs and facilities that provide the best of both worlds. Your child can attend a program several days a week where they’ll get social time with friends and peers.

Then, they’ll get homework assignments for the remaining days of the week. They’ll still have the accountability of homework while enjoying a unique education.

Only You Know What Your Child Needs

It’s up to you to decide whether your child could benefit from a holistic education. It isn’t an easy decision and requires a lot of effort on your part, so make sure you’re ready. And if it doesn’t seem right for your child — that’s okay! Remember, learning isn’t a cookie-cutter scenario. Everyone will require different things.

There’s a plethora of information about holistic education available online, including sample curriculum. If you have any questions, opinions, or tips about holistic education, drop us a line below!

I'm Missy, a mother of three and a middle school drama teacher at a private school. I'm obsessed with my Vizsla (dog), traveling, and the musical Hamilton. I also enjoy writing and sharing fun parenting stories, which is what brought me here.

If your kids are heading back to school, chances are you are looking for ways to keep them happy and engaged after a day of online or hybrid learning. Little Passports is now offering After School Activities & Adventures. These new subscription boxes are made especially for families looking to enrich their children beyond their traditional curriculum. 

Little Passports

After-School Adventure Packs, which include After School in a Box: World Edition (ages 6+) and After School in a Box: Science Junior (ages 5+), are one-of-a-kind kits that draw kids into enriching activities and fun stories related to natural science, STEM, and the world. Each bundle is jam packed with hours of activities that are designed with offline after-school engagement in mind.

Little Passports

Little Passports is now partnering with Homeroom.com, a trusted family resource for student enrichment and online education, to offer teacher-led classes. Children have the opportunity to explore, build, and discover Little Passports’ world and science kits, with the guidance of an instructor and alongside other kids! Homeroom.com is offering 4 different Little Passports classes for children between the ages of 5-10, and each class offers a series of 60-min lessons.

—Jennifer Swartvagher

All photos courtesy of Little Passports

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For the first time, Ancestry will provide K-12 teachers across America a free six-month World Explorer subscription to access billions of historical records, providing support in lesson development and project creation for the school year ahead. This past spring, the brand created teacher developed lesson plans which were available to download for free. Parents and tutors will also have access to Ancestry Library Edition as a free remote learning resource. 

woman on tablet

The free subscription will give teachers the tools to help students across the nation make connections to their ancestors, historical places, and events throughout time. By pulling records around historical events to contextualize chapters in history like WWII and the Civil War, teachers can bring their curriculum to life in relevant and exciting ways which is especially important for keeping students engaged during virtual learning.

“Family history research is a powerful tool for building resilience, connection and understanding for all ages,” said Margo Georgiadis, President and CEO of Ancestry. “We are deeply appreciative of the work of educators, particularly during this challenging time. Ancestry is proud to provide free tools to support educators with their focus on inspiring students with new curriculum topics and to make richer and more personal connections to important moments in history.”

The platform allows K-12 teachers access to the World Explorer subscription, one of three membership choices; the other two are U.S. Discovery and All Access. The World Explorer membership includes access to all records (U.S. and international) on Ancestry.

  • Access to most records on Ancestry, including Census records, draft cards, immigration records, as well as marriage and birth records, and much more
  • Access to all public family trees on Ancestry
  • Access to Ancestry Hints® regarding the records included in this membership
  • Ability for educators to create and edit their own family tree

Beginning on Aug. 20, up to 10,000 teachers can verify their credentials on Ancestry.com/backtoschool through Sept. 30.

Beyond teachers, remote access to Ancestry Library Edition may be available as a genealogy research tool for parents, tutors and educators. For library patrons of over 2,100 libraries that subscribe to Ancestry Library Edition, the offering will provide instant free access to a wide range of resources for genealogical and historical research. Distributed exclusively by ProQuest and powered by Ancestry.com, the program grants card holders access to billions of records in census data, historical photos, plus local narratives, oral histories, indexes and other resources in over 30,000 databases that span from the 1500s to the 2000s. To access this database, contact your local library to ask if they participate and for more details.

In addition to the wide availability of resources obtained through Ancestry Library Edition, parents and educators also have access to an intuitive search interface, detailed search indexes, and helpful Learning Center tools, making Ancestry Library Edition an indispensable resource for education this school year. This program will be available through the end of September.

Visit the website for more information on additional back-to-school resources and creative solutions for teachers and parents.

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: Brooke Cagle on Unsplash

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With schools turning to online learning and so many people opting to keep their kids at home, we wanted to get guidance from the amazing experts who do it every day—homeschool moms. We’re sharing insights from Shanell Eden of Two Lights Academy is a homeschool mom to her 6-year-old, Sprout. Here’s what her typical day looks like, her philosophy on picking materials, and answers to some practical FAQ.

How Do You Structure Your Day? 

I like to talk about ‘rhythm’ versus ‘time frame’ because part of learning is being flexible and adapting to our kids and how they respond. My rhythm looks like this:

  • We start with relaxation: For us, that’s yoga and meditation.

  • Then we go into ‘Morning Magic’ (some call it ‘Morning Basket’): It’s a collection of topics from character building to art appreciation to nature study to reading aloud.

  • From here we enter into ‘Core Curriculum’: The 3 topics we cover every day are: Reading, Math, and Language Arts. Other topics we rotate such as Spanish, geography, and geology.

  • We always end with independent reading: I grab a book I want to read. He grabs a book he wants to read. And we’ll sit down to calming music and read together.

These activities usually fall between 10 a.m. and extend no later than 3 p.m. The most important thing is to be observant of my Sprout. If he is starting to get tired or needs a break, we take a break with 15 minutes of free play before jumping back into our studies. It’s very important to me that he is happy, enjoying learning, and doesn’t feel overwhelmed.

How do you pick (or make) homeschool materials?

So many people know that each child is different and that they should observe, listen, and adapt to their child. Yet still, when it comes to schooling, they expect a list of ‘best materials.’ We really believe that it is important to follow your child and understand his or her learning st‌yle. For my Sprout, he learns through rich literature and stories. Others are audio listeners or visual learners. Knowing my Sprout loves stories, I focus on trying to find materials that enable him to learn subjects through stories—versus worksheets or memorization.

For example, with math, the ‘curriculum’ I follow is called “Singapore Math.” But to learn the concepts, I will bring out storybooks that have math concepts in them. I’ll also bring out our SumBlox, so he has hands-on activities to make him feel like he is both playing and learning.

As another example, teaching a foreign language is really important to me, and he was really interested in Spanish. We want him to be fluent, but we’re not fluent. So it was important for us to have something that allowed him to hear the words in the accent but also be hands-on, in a multi-sensorial experience. That’s why when I saw the Habbi Habbi books, I thought, “I have to have them in my home.” We love them so much.

Independent Learning or Guided Learning?

A lot of parents ask if their kids can learn independently, or whether I’m sitting there with him. For the most part, I am there because I like to observe, answer questions, or unblock an exercise. But of course, there are blocks like independent reading or certain exercises where I can start him off, and he can work relatively independently—while I go make lunch or start a load of laundry.

I also write everything out in our planner. That way, he can look at it and see how our day is going to flow.

How Do You Keep “on Track”?

People ask this a lot, and it can be very sensitive. But I turn to two sources. One is Rebecca Rupp’s book Home Learning Year by Year, which lays out—from preschool to high school—exactly what children learn at every single grade level. The other is the HSLDA website for each state. They will let you know what your state recommends. I look at these two sources and just make sure we’re on track and ahead of the curve.

What’s Your Most Important Tip When It Comes to Homeschooling?

A lot of parents feel nervous about starting, and I always tell them—no matter what your background is, you know your child better than anyone else. Some days will be higher, some lower, but you will make it through the day! Focus your day on the love you are putting into what you are teaching, not how many subjects you are covering in a day.

 

H&AL of Habbi Habbi
Tinybeans Voices Contributor

Habbi Habbi Reading Wand & Bilingual Books is the easiest way to start kids on Chinese & Spanish. Just turn on and tap. Every inch is tappable, and our books are as intentional in content as they are beautiful - topics like kindness, emotions, and more. @BeHabbi | habbihabbi.com.