I have a 1 year old daughter and I’m a native speaker of a very small European language while living the UK with my British husband. We do One Parent One Language with my husband speaking English and me speaking my native language to our daughter. My daughter also goes to an English-speaking nursery and sees her British family much more so my language is very much the minority language for her.
I have read lots of resources on raising a bilingual child and the importance of reading to your child every day is very clear. However, I don’t understand how to practically do this.
We have a lot of baby books with cardboard pages and pictures that my daughter loves to flip through and I always talk to her in my language about what’s on the page. However, she flips the pages so quickly that I struggle to even say a word about what’s on the page before she’s on the next one and 3 seconds later, she has finished flipping through the book.
Reading an actual book is completely impossible because she immediately climbs on top of me and starts flipping through and scrunching up the pages. I usually can’t even read a sentence. I’ve tried reading a book while she plays with toys, but the toys end up being so loud that they drown out my voice and I can’t get through the page because it’s so distracting.
With so much of the guidance focusing on reading, I’m feeling quite worried about my lack of ability to read to her. I do talk to her in my language all the time, point at things around us, describe the book etc, but this ends up being incredibly receptive and I feel like I’m not exposing her to new words or rich enough vocabulary.
How do other people do this? I feel like she won’t learn my language because of this, but am at a total loss for how to make it work. It’s worth adding that my language is so small that the opportunities for her to get other exposure are hard to come by.
I have read lots of resources on raising a bilingual child and the importance of reading to your child every day is very clear. However, I don’t understand how to practically do this.
We have a lot of baby books with cardboard pages and pictures that my daughter loves to flip through and I always talk to her in my language about what’s on the page. However, she flips the pages so quickly that I struggle to even say a word about what’s on the page before she’s on the next one and 3 seconds later, she has finished flipping through the book.
Reading an actual book is completely impossible because she immediately climbs on top of me and starts flipping through and scrunching up the pages. I usually can’t even read a sentence. I’ve tried reading a book while she plays with toys, but the toys end up being so loud that they drown out my voice and I can’t get through the page because it’s so distracting.
With so much of the guidance focusing on reading, I’m feeling quite worried about my lack of ability to read to her. I do talk to her in my language all the time, point at things around us, describe the book etc, but this ends up being incredibly receptive and I feel like I’m not exposing her to new words or rich enough vocabulary.
How do other people do this? I feel like she won’t learn my language because of this, but am at a total loss for how to make it work. It’s worth adding that my language is so small that the opportunities for her to get other exposure are hard to come by.