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Studies have shown that people who learn a foreign language at a young age tend to have denser gray matter in the brain compared to those who learn a language later in life. Brain imaging comparisons reveal that bilingual individuals generally have denser gray matter than monolingual ones.
But the benefits extend beyond just brain density! Research indicates that children who learn a foreign language develop stronger problem-solving skills, which positively impacts their performance in subjects like math. They also tend to achieve higher scores in math, reading, and English.
Additionally, learning a foreign language enhances overall mental development, improves listening skills, and deepens the understanding of their native language. It also fosters an appreciation for diverse cultures, provides an early advantage in meeting college language requirements, and may broaden future job opportunities.
Given these significant benefits, it’s crucial to introduce your child to a foreign language as early as possible!
Quotes From the Experts
“The optimum ‘window of opportunity for learning’ languages lasts until about the age of ten or twelve,” says Harry Chugani of Children’s Hospital of Michigan, “…yet most U.S. districts wait until junior high (or high school) after the windows are closed.”
– Newsweek, S. Begely, “Your Child’s Brain”
“Learning a foreign language at a very early age can clearly benefit a child’s reading abilities…Preschoolers who speak one language can usually recite the alphabet and spell their names, but cannot read without the help of pictures…But bilingual preschoolers can read sooner because they are able to recognize symbolic relationships between letters/characters and sounds without having visual objects.”
– Developmental Psychology, Ellen Bialystok
“A study of 13,200 third through fifth graders was revealing. Regardless of race, gender, or academic level, kids taking a foreign language did better in the English section of the Basic Skills Test. Math scores of children studying a second language improved, too.”
– Child, Lynne S. Dumas, “Learning a second language”
“There is abundant evidence that the best time to learn new languages is relatively early in life.”
– Pediatrics, American Academy of Pediatrics
“Research suggests that learning a second language at an early age can enrich mental development.”
– Business Week, Edward Baig, “Bringing up baby bilingually”
“…children who receive even small amounts of second-language instruction are more creative and are better at solving complex problems.
– SmartKid Online
“The learning of language other than one’s own provides a unique conduit to higher-order thinking skills,”
– Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
“We are born with a greater brain capacity than we actually realize, which is why children pick up a second language so easily.”
– Paco Rakic, MD, professor of neuroscience at Yale University, as quoted in Working Mother by Carolyn Jabs
“We have…identified an increase in the density of grey matter in the brain…of bilinguals relative to monolinguals, which is more pronounced in early rather than late bilinguals, and have also shown that they density in this region increases with second-language proficiency but decreases as the age of acquisition increases.”
– Research from University College of London, as published in Nature