Vivian Cook's 'Portrait Of The Bilingual Child'

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In this excerpt “Portrait of the Bilingual Child, Fred Genesee,” Vivian Cook discusses some of the effects of learning a second language for young children by looking at two main questions that come up. The two questions that he discusses are: “does learning a second language damage the young child?” and “are the two languages separate or combined in the young child?” (Cook, 167-168). I have thought about similar questions in my other EDBE courses for ESL teachers, but the tone of this article was much different than I expected it to be based on my previous learning experiences.

In the beginning of the excerpt, I felt that Cook had a different attitude toward bilingualism and second language acquisition because the excerpt starts off with“crucial issues about the simultaneous acquisition of two languages by young children” (Cook, 167). This caught me off guard because that goes against everything else that I have learned about second language acquisition; I have been taught that it is easier for children to learn a second language when they are younger and that it is perfectly fine for children to learn a second language from an early age, but I get the impression that Cook does not think that way based on his answers to the two questions. He mentioned in his answer to …show more content…

Personally, I feel like knowing multiple languages gives you a step up in today’s society where so many people speak languages other than English, but I cannot blame the children who only know one for only knowing one, can I? How do you compare students (and people) who know only one language to those who know more than one language? It is a difficult, and nearly impossible task I think to successfully compare the two groups without bringing some level of

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