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Is it Good to be Bilingual?

Hi there!
The ability to function in two or more languages feels almost like a superpower – and science agrees. The effects of bilingualism have been increasingly studied in the last few years and determined as overwhelmingly positive. (Yes, there was a time when it was thought that learning an additional language as a child would only serve to confuse the brain. Thankfully, that’s all in the past, as we gradually inched forward to agree that this is a false belief.) Now I will leave no stone unturned to persuade you why bilingualism rocks😉.

Bilingualism actually grows grey matter!

In the recent past, parents and teachers assumed that teaching children to another language at an early age would delay their language skills and somehow stunt their overall intellectual growth. It was quite common to find children with foreign mothers or fathers who had not made any particular effort to immediately pass on their language to their children. As scientific research progresses, however, it is increasingly clear than bilingual children reach major language milestones at broadly the same age as monolingual children. Moreover, science is discovering that learning that speaking more than one language may have cognitive benefits childhood through to old age, keeping the mind youthful and lessening senility. Even brain scans reveal a greater density of grey matter in areas of the brain associated with language processing in people who learned a second language under the age of five😮.

Bilingualism can help to ward off the mental ageing process and is a firewall against dementia 

It’s long been understood that actively exercising the brain can help people to remain sharper in old age and lessen the effects of senility. Unsurprisingly, perhaps, bilinguals exercise their brains automatically as they switch from one language to another. According to one study, the onset of dementia was delayed by 4 years in bilinguals compared to monolinguals with dementia. 

Bilingualism is increasingly common in today’s world

People are more likely than ever to live in a country other than where they were born and where another language is spoken. As you'd expect English is the most popular second language of all but did you know that now people who speak English fluently as a second language outnumber native speakers?😎

Bilingual children do better in education

Being bilingual may give children an advantage at school. Bilingual children have been shown to be better than their monolingual peers at focusing on a task while tuning out distractions. This seemingly enhanced ability to concentrate has also been found in bilingual adults, especially those who became fluent in two languages at an early age. It is thought that being able to filter things out when switching language enhances the brain’s ability to focus and ignore irrelevant information.

Bilingual children only struggle with 'language confusion' once in a blue moon

Ever met an adult who could barely talk because he or she was a 'bilingual child'? Of course not! Some parents may choose to use the "one parent-one language" approach, where each parent speaks a different language to the child. However, even in culture that are naturally bilingual and children may hear family members frequently switching languages, confusion does not occur. While children may 'code mix' to an extent they soon learn to separate out the languages.

Bilinguals are not always equally proficient in both languages

Most bilinguals, whatever their sage, are not equally proficient in both languages, and will have a 'dominant language'. The dominant language is usually influenced by the majority language of the society in which the individual lives and can change several times – for example if a person moves country where their second language is spoken, or changes to a job where they need to use it much more, they may after a while feel more proficient in the other language.

You can still learn a language as an adult!

Many people take a rain check and then feel they cannot learn a new language when they reach a certain age. Countless studies reveal that while our ability to hear and understand a second language becomes more difficult with age, the adult brain can be retrained to pick up foreign sounds more easily again. The difficulties that adults have in learning languages are not biological, but perceptual. Given the right stimuli, then, even adult brains can overcome the habits they have developed to effectively crowd out certain sounds and learn new ones. Moreover, while the effects are not as pronounced as with people that learned a second language from an early age, learning a language in adulthood can stimulate and protect the brain into old age. 

Bilingual promotes all areas of cognitive functioning

It's not just in language processing that bilinguals have an advantage. Mastering two languages helps bilingual children solve logic problems and multi-task more effectively. 

Bilinguals are better listeners

Perhaps because they are used to differentiating between two or more languages, studies have shown that all foreign language learners develop on average better listening skills than monolingual peers😏.

Bilingualism encourages people to think globally

Speaking more than one language from an early age introduces the idea that the world is a diverse place with different languages and cultures to explore.

That's all for now. Hope you liked my research and ideas. See you next week 💗

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