LITTLE PIM BLOG
Contest: Win a Copy of Little Pim French: In My Home (DVD 4)
Here's your chance to win a copy of Little Pim French: In My Home (DVD 4).Little Pim is an award-winning foreign language immersion DVD series for babies, toddlers and preschoolers.
Here's how to enter this contest:
Translate one of the French vocabulary words below into English. Leave the word as a comment.
une chaise
une maison
un lit
une cuisine
une table
One winner will be chosen randomly. If the winner (that could be you!) is also a Little Pim newsletter subscriber, he or she will be sent a bonus prize! Subscribe to the newsletter by going to LittlePim.com and looking for the blue box on the right.
Bonne chance!
Sing Along With Little Pim at Giggle
This week I had a great time meeting moms, babies and caregivers when Little Pim hosted the first of three free foreign language events at Giggle stores in Manhattan. We sang songs in Spanish and French with a live guitarist named Pamela. Clips of Little Pim in various languages were also shown and many parents asked me questions about their children's foreign language learning.
At the end, we all enjoyed croissant treats while our kids colored in pictures of Little Pim! Please join us for one of our next events:
-- September 21st at the Giggle in Soho or
-- September 28th at the Giggle Upper East Side
The events are at 5:00PM and last about 45 minutes.
Little Pim's founder and mother of two, Julia Pimsleur Levine, will be in attendance.
Click here to register and RSVP : http://www.giggle.com/store_events.aspx#soho.
We'll also be in Boston on October 9th at the Curious George Book Store in Cambridge at 4:00 pm.
Visit the website: http://www.curiousg.com/index.aspx
Hasta pronto!
Two young Spanish learners:
Video clip of Pamela singing and playing guitar:
Contest: Little Pim + SpanglishBaby = A Trilingual Adventure!
A couple of months ago I had the privilege of meeting some amazing multilingual bloggers at a special lunch I hosted for BlogHer conference attendees. One of those bloggers was Roxana Soto; she runs the website SpanglishBaby with her business partner, Ana Flores. When they suggested that SpanglishBaby and Little Pim partner up to help Roxana teach her 4-year-old her third language, French, how could we say no?
From Roxana via SpanglishBaby.com:
"In an effort to make this venture into a third language more of a reality, we’ve partnered with the fabulous Little Pim and will be using their entertaining and educational products and materials for our trilingual adventures.
The plan is for me to document Vanessa’s progress through regular posts and to also bring you expert advice in the form of vlogs of the consultations we’ll have with Julia Pimsleur Levine -- Little Pim’s founder -- to help us along our journey!"
Whether you're using Little Pim to help your child learn English, start on a second language or a fifth, you'll want to follow this journey and glean some tips along the way.
Watch the first vlog below. Happy language learning!
Contest: In the comments below, share one way you can help or are helping your child pick up words from a second language. One person who comments will win either Spanish Bop or French Bop!
Click "Share on Facebook" and receive a bonus entry by leaving an "I shared!" comment below!
If the winning person is also a subscriber of the Little Pim newsletter when they are picked, they'll also receive a Little Pim Plush Panda! Subscribe here: http://www.LittlePim.com/
Getting To The Other Side of "No"
Every book you read about teaching your child a second language will tell you its totally normal that your child will go through phases where he or she does NOT want to speak, hear or have anything to do with the language you are introducing. That doesn't make it any easier when it happens! My older son Emmett (6) must have read those books because he is in a full on frontal defense mode, practically arm wrestling me with his eyes when I try to speak French with him. He says "don't speak French!" and sometimes covers his ears in case I don't get it. Happily, he has been hearing French since he was a baby, so even though he's far from fluent, he's pretty comfortable and I know that this is just a phase. I can also always speak French to his 2 1/2 year old little brother in ear shot!
Even so, I must admit that it has not been fun. For awhile I stopped speaking French to him, it just didn't seem worth the battle. This was until last week when I was interviewed by Roxana of SpanglishBaby about helping her get her daughter started on her third language (French). We commiserated about kids occasional resistance to our language (she taught her daughter Spanish), and her persistence inspired me to re-commit to teaching Emmett.
I made a promise to Roxana and to myself that I would speak French at breakfast to my boys every day for two weeks. To make it fun for Emmett I told him that at the end of the two weeks I'd take him out for a special French breakfast ( he loves croissants and chocolat chaud!). That did the trick. Now we are back on track, drinking our 'jus d'orange' in the morning and having 'du lait s'I'll vous plait' in our cereal!
Thanks Roxana!
Too all the moms and dads getting through "No" right now, hang in there and remember to keep it fun! Make up a new game or offer a special treat but don't give up. They will thank you later if you keep it up.
Watch my video blog with Roxana below.
English Only vs. Global Citizens What do you think?
According to a recent Op Ed in the Wall Street Journal, despite the fact that the rest of the world is increasingly bilingual, many Americans not only accept that they only speak English, they defend it (“What if 'English-Only' Isn't Wrong?” August 27, 2010). These English-only Americans believe the rest of the world should, and will continue to, learn English, to communicate with us as well as people from other countries. Or that some computer software will descend, deus ex machina, in the near future and replace the need for cross-cultural, cross-linguistic human interaction. When carried out across our national education landscape, this means Americans continue to devalue the advantages of teaching our children a second language. Foreign language learning is not mandatory in the national public school system and the percentage of public elementary schools offering foreign-language instruction decreased from 31% to 25% over the past ten years; in middle schools, that figure dropped from 75% to 58%. This simply makes it that much harder for our kids to succeed in tomorrow’s job market, a market where the US will not necessarily be the reigning economic power. They will also miss out on all the social, political and cultural advantages of speaking a second language. Why would anyone defend that?
In contrast to the bleak statistics, there are still pockets of parents lobbying for language teaching all over the country. A recent Fayetteville Observer article reported on a first-grade teacher in a public school based in Cumberland County, North Carolina who is getting ready for back to school by decorating her class with maps and pictures of koalas for their Australia study. All 650 students in her school will also be learning Mandarin Chinese (“Youngsters heading back to globe-trotting classroom” August 22, 2010). She explains, "Our kids, our children, when they graduate from here have to know there's a bigger world out there than Cumberland County or the United States... And that they're going to have to interact with kids from all over the world or compete with kids from all over the world."
What is your take on "English-only vs. raising global citizens"? If you are reading my blog, I assume you care about foreign-language learning and how it will shape our children's future. Judging from your community, do you think America is going the way of the North Carolina school or the English-only defenders?
Articles mentioned: http://www.fayobserver.com/articles/2010/08/22/1022759?sac=Home
http://online.wsj.com/article/NA_WSJ_PUB:SB10001424052748704002104575290602423212366.html
Children learning languages abroad
This week, Little Pim met Karen Ong, the founder and CEO of Language International, a place where parents can find and compare language study abroad programs for their children and also for themselves. They offer study abroad programs worldwide for kids as young as 3 years old. Karen says their most popular programs include Spanish courses in Spain, French courses in France, and Italian courses in Italy. For parents who want their kids to learn English, there are also English courses in London as well as in other cities in both the US and the UK available.
You've heard it said before, people learn languages fastest when they're younger, before their thinking is set in stone in their native language. In fact, many people who are fluent in two or more languages either learned a second language from their parents when they were young, or lived abroad during this time. Kids growing up in these environments will often learn the second language as effortlessly, and fluently, as they learned their first, helping them in later life. So, if you want to give your kids a linguistic head start, but don't personally speak a second language or know anyone who does, then the best course of action might be exposing them to a new language abroad.
There are multiple summer exchange and language learning programs for teens, but at this point any language learning bonus has probably worn off. However, even for younger children, who obviously require supervision, there are still a number of language learning programs, and other options like tutors and Little Pim DVD's, available. Of course, simply having your kids in a foreign language speaking environment for any length of time would probably have the same effect, as they naturally absorb the foreign tongue around them. Even a yearly vacation to Mexico or Spain for only two weeks at a time can help the young ones pick up some Spanish. Quite simply, to get your kids speaking another language with fluent ease, taking them abroad for any manner of time will do wonders (although obviously the longer the better). If you have a foreign language speaker in the family, or even a nanny who speaks another language, then that can definitely help as well. After all, when it comes to something as positive and character building as learning a new language, it's never too soon to start!
Language Learning From Coast-to-Coast
On August 19th the New York Times ran a front-page story about the growing interest among New York parents raising their kids to be bilingual “Looking for Baby Sitters: Foreign Language a Must.” Here at Little Pim, we know this is more than just a New York, or an East Coast phenomenon. We talk every day with parents, grandparents and aunts and uncles from South Carolina to Montana to Seattle who are looking for ways to introduce the kids in their lives to a second language from the earliest age.
We see that it's not just people who speak two languages themselves that want their kids to learn a foreign language, but forward-looking parents everywhere. Parents are signing up their kids for immersion schools, buying language-teaching products and seeking out online communities to help them raise their kids with two languages in increasing numbers. They have read the widely available research that shows that learning a second language improves memory, enhances analytic skills and is generally a great work out for the brain. They also know it’s a global economy, and want their kids to have a place in it.
The cognitive benefits are still being studied, but it is clearly beneficial. As psychologist and researcher on bilingualism Dr. Ellen Bialystok says in the article, “bilingual children do better at complex tasks.” While this doesn’t mean your child will automatically jump to the head of his Kindergarten class because he can say "tengo hambre", one mother notes that her bilingual son “tested in the 99th percentile for the city’s gifted and talented program.”
Research shows that bilinguals tend to have more grey matter in their brain than monolinguals and are better able to multi-task and problem-solve.
Why wouldn’t you want your child to have these benefits? Well, some people still think learning a second language will “interfere” with learning English. The article totally dismisses this persistent myth, while acknowledging there could be a short-term delay in children finding the right word to express themselves in the right language. But what many parents believe outweighs this short term delay is that their kids are learning at the time they learn languages best (up to age six), that early exposure guarantees them the best possible accent, and they may eventually speak both languages perfectly.
Speaking a second language is a skill that opens up a lifetime of educational, social and professional possibilities. “We view it as a gift we are giving him,” said one of the dads interviewed. With millions of American parents giving this gift, our kids can become more full participants in the increasingly multi-lingual country and world in which we are raising them.
Contest! Tori Spelling, Liam and Stella Watch Little Pim!
Here at Little Pim the office has been buzzing quite a bit lately with the release of DVDs 4, 5, and 6 and many other exciting projects in the works, but we received a special treat today when a "thank you" note from Tori Spelling arrived!
The mom of two children, Liam and Stella, and star of Tori & Dean: Home Sweet Hollywood thanked Little Pim for sending her a copy of Little Pim Spanish and said she's learning from the DVD as well!
We're tickled pink that Tori and the kids are enjoying español as a family. Each of our 35-minute DVDs are segmented into seven 5-minute episodes to accommodate a young child’s attention span and encourage pausing for parent interaction. The Dean/Spelling family is right on track for an interactive language learning adventure.
Mucho gusto for the note, Tori!
Contest: Win a copy of Little Pim Spanish I Can Count! (DVD 6).
Leave a comment sharing why you'd like your child to learn Spanish. If you click on the Facebook Share button below and share this post with your friends, leave an additional "I shared" comment for a bonus entry. You can also receive a bonus entry by emailing info@littlepim.com.
The winner is Tracey with the email address: tlm*******@msn.com
Little Pim & BlogHer 2010!
Last week women bloggers from all over the United States (and beyond) descended on New York City for the annual BlogHer conference, a weekend full of fun, learning, and networking. Being based in New York we decided that this would be the perfect opportunity to meet up with some of the wonderful blogging women we've worked with over the years and to make some new friends in the world of language blogs!
On Friday afternoon we held a special lunch at Bar Americain with six amazing women, all of whom own blogs with an emphasis on one of our favorite languages: Spanish. The time I spent with these bilingual bloggers was fantastic- the blogosphere is expanding as writers of varied cultures enter the scene to connect with waiting audiences.
Thank you Roxana, Ana, Melanie, Silvia, Rory and Carrie for making our Little Pim Language Lunch entertaining and informative!
Contest: "I want to teach my child a second language because...".
Babble.com blogger Elina Furman included Little Pim in a post entitled, "Best Products for Global Citizens". We couldn't have said it better ourselves! According to CNN.com, 66% of the world is bilingual. Also, 14% of students consider themselves fluent in two languages.
In her post, Elina shared why Little Pim was one of her product picks:
"Of course, I want him to be cultured and worldly, but with my workload and his attitude about sleeping anywhere but his crib, I don’t see us taking that trek anytime soon. So in honor of helping our kids develop a global awareness and a love of travel while still staying close to home, here are the products I’ve come to love."
Parents have many reasons for choosing Little Pim. In the comments section below, share why helping your child learn a second language is important to you. One person will win one DVD, one CD, or a pack of Word & Phrase cards!
If you share this link with your Facebook Friends by clicking on the button below, let us know by leaving a bonus "I shared" comment and increase your chances of winning! You can also send in a bonus comment by emailing info@littlepim.com.
Browse LittlePim.com to choose your prize. Good luck!