focusedontheneedle
New member
My daughter is 5, the community language is Japanese, but she spoke English at home with me first. She started talking before she was one, and was speaking in full sentences by the time she was two. I thought she'd have no problems picking up English because she started talking so early, even though it's often said bilingual children start later.
Anyway, she started going to Japanese daycare full-time when she was 3, and since then, I don't feel like her English has improved a whole lot. She still has immature pronunciation, like difficulty pronouncing r and th, and a lisp when pronouncing s and z. She makes grammatical mistakes like forgetting the s at the end of third person verbs in present tense (He make cake) and getting the word order wrong when modifying nouns ("This is the I like thing" not "This is the thing I like.")
We were talking to an English speaking SLP online briefly last year. According to the SLP, her pronunciation issues are not uncommon for monolingual English speakers, and she might grow out of them, but it's better to work on it earlier rather than later. Also her grammar mistakes like leaving off the s could be her way of "correcting" her lisp. Word order mistakes could be influenced by Japanese word order. The SLP suggested weekly sessions to work on my daughter's issues, but my daughter had trouble focusing online and it was SO expensive.
Basically, I'm wondering what everyone here does to help their child learn grammar and pronunciation in their non-community language, when there is no local support from school or SLPs? When should I be concerned about language development? We are strictly OPOL and almost all books and media are in English.
Anyway, she started going to Japanese daycare full-time when she was 3, and since then, I don't feel like her English has improved a whole lot. She still has immature pronunciation, like difficulty pronouncing r and th, and a lisp when pronouncing s and z. She makes grammatical mistakes like forgetting the s at the end of third person verbs in present tense (He make cake) and getting the word order wrong when modifying nouns ("This is the I like thing" not "This is the thing I like.")
We were talking to an English speaking SLP online briefly last year. According to the SLP, her pronunciation issues are not uncommon for monolingual English speakers, and she might grow out of them, but it's better to work on it earlier rather than later. Also her grammar mistakes like leaving off the s could be her way of "correcting" her lisp. Word order mistakes could be influenced by Japanese word order. The SLP suggested weekly sessions to work on my daughter's issues, but my daughter had trouble focusing online and it was SO expensive.
Basically, I'm wondering what everyone here does to help their child learn grammar and pronunciation in their non-community language, when there is no local support from school or SLPs? When should I be concerned about language development? We are strictly OPOL and almost all books and media are in English.