Immigrant parents struggle to keep their children bilingual
July 23rd, 2007This article describes the shift away from immigrants’ native languages toward English - at the expense of what would otherwise be a very valuable asset: bilingualism.
Share ThisLAWRENCE — After a lunch of hot dogs and rice, Jordy Berges blasted a ball off the wall of the lunchroom at his mother’s office, his stomping grounds for the summer.
“No juegues aquĆ,” Yovanna Berges scolded her 7-year-old son, telling him in Spanish to stop.”Sorry,” he answered her, in English.
Berges, an immigrant from Peru, is growing accustomed to such conversations with her son. She is struggling to raise him to speak English and Spanish fluently, which might not seem like a big challenge in the city with the highest proportion of Latinos in Massachusetts. But researchers say Berges and immigrant parents nationwide are confronting a difficult truth: Their children are losing their languages.




