Hi multilingual parents!
For context, I am trilingual (Filipino/English/French), English being my strongest and my favored language. My SO is French-speaking and about a B2 level in English. We live in French-speaking Switzerland.
I take care of my now 16 month old baby 100% and I‘ve been speaking to her in English since in utero. My SO speaks to her in English as well since he sees that she can understand him better.
She has very good comprehension of basic commands, has about 10 words (only one is French technically but I doubt she realizes any of this haha) and about 10
signs as well (different from the words).
She starts daycare in three weeks and it‘s our first big separation (she rarely got babysat). The daycare director said that it is against policy to speak anything other than French. They will speak to her in English if the situation really requires it.
I am worried that this might make her integration more difficult and that she would have trouble bonding with her caregiver. My baby doesn‘t warm up easily to strangers.
I‘ve been trying to tell Dad to speak to her in French forever to do OPOL - he starts but then gives up. He says he prefers speaking to her in English. Apparently it‘s more fun.
Baby‘s exposure to French is passive for the most part (me & Dad talking to each other, family and friends talking around her, once to twice a week mommy groups)
My questions:
- Has anyone had this kind of scenario?
- Should I insist on Dad talking to her in French? Does it matter at this point? Or should I favor him speaking to her in English, since I have very few friends who speak English?
- Do they take to the language pretty ok at daycare?
- How was integration?
- Is there any chance she picked some French up passively? People sometimes talk to her directly but nearly not as much as I do.
- Do you have any other advice?
Daycare will be 1.5 days a week.
I was an immigrant child (to Canada) and I remember feeling terrified when I got to school and knew no French. I was older (10 y.o.) though. I‘m hoping it‘s not the same for young toddlers…
Any advice would be great!
Thank you for the time, kind internet strangers!
And if you have some extra time, any advice on when/how I can add Filipino to the mix (i.e. How long after i‘ve started daycare, at which frequency during the week, etc.)
For context, I am trilingual (Filipino/English/French), English being my strongest and my favored language. My SO is French-speaking and about a B2 level in English. We live in French-speaking Switzerland.
I take care of my now 16 month old baby 100% and I‘ve been speaking to her in English since in utero. My SO speaks to her in English as well since he sees that she can understand him better.
She has very good comprehension of basic commands, has about 10 words (only one is French technically but I doubt she realizes any of this haha) and about 10
signs as well (different from the words).
She starts daycare in three weeks and it‘s our first big separation (she rarely got babysat). The daycare director said that it is against policy to speak anything other than French. They will speak to her in English if the situation really requires it.
I am worried that this might make her integration more difficult and that she would have trouble bonding with her caregiver. My baby doesn‘t warm up easily to strangers.
I‘ve been trying to tell Dad to speak to her in French forever to do OPOL - he starts but then gives up. He says he prefers speaking to her in English. Apparently it‘s more fun.
Baby‘s exposure to French is passive for the most part (me & Dad talking to each other, family and friends talking around her, once to twice a week mommy groups)
My questions:
- Has anyone had this kind of scenario?
- Should I insist on Dad talking to her in French? Does it matter at this point? Or should I favor him speaking to her in English, since I have very few friends who speak English?
- Do they take to the language pretty ok at daycare?
- How was integration?
- Is there any chance she picked some French up passively? People sometimes talk to her directly but nearly not as much as I do.
- Do you have any other advice?
Daycare will be 1.5 days a week.
I was an immigrant child (to Canada) and I remember feeling terrified when I got to school and knew no French. I was older (10 y.o.) though. I‘m hoping it‘s not the same for young toddlers…
Any advice would be great!
Thank you for the time, kind internet strangers!
And if you have some extra time, any advice on when/how I can add Filipino to the mix (i.e. How long after i‘ve started daycare, at which frequency during the week, etc.)