Benefits Of Foreign Language In Education

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Should Foreign Language Classes Be Offered throughout a Student’s Entire School Career?
In her 2014 globalpost newspaper article “Disadvantages of Studying a New Language in Kindergarten” Amy Pearson claims that “studying a new language in Kindergarten may come with unfortunate disadvantages” (Pearson). Her argument is that schools are lacking proper teaching resources or time to achieve measurable results. Also, the academic requirements of an elementary classroom may make it difficult to include additional instruction in a foreign language, and there may be debate over which language instruction would be most beneficial to students. Pearson, however, has not considered the countless opportunities teaching elementary children another language will provide them. Although the child’s education is at the best interest of the teachers, parents, and school representatives, the fact that whether or not the child absorbs the information and applies it to their everyday lives serves as a determining factor. In an attempt to benefit the growing minds of children, representatives of schools should decide whether or not they want to spend time and resources to allow foreign language curriculum to be taught so that children can gain cultural exposure and the ability to communicate with different language, increase their test scores and their job opportunities, and allow them to be diverse in a country that is growing in numbers of foreign-speaking citizens.
Pearson, along with many others against other languages being taught in kindergarten, assumes that the education system simply does not have everything they need in order to teach young children another language. They assume that native language speakers are the most effective teachers ...

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...panish may not be considered a foreign language anymore because it has become so prominent in this country. Giving students more options of languages and cultures they can study such as German, or Chinese, would give a solution to the question of which language would be more beneficial.
Language forms the way we reason. Whether we're listening to an influential speaker, captivated in prevailing writing, or engaged in a dialogue, language can introduce us to new ideas, perspectives, and opportunities. However, language may physically alter one’s mind and a more imperative level. “Bilinguals, for example, have denser gray matter in their language centers than monolinguals. Bilinguals can more easily focus on two tasks at once. They think more analytically. Parts of their brain devoted to memory, reasoning, and planning are larger than those of monolinguals” (Roitman).

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