My daughter sometimes says things in an Indian accent, a Kiwi accent or an American accent...and she is English. I think its hilarious and just part of the multi-cultural place we live in.Thats ok a little bit from here or there, in our family we call it a cosmopolitan accent, we all had it growing up in mixed environments. But, a teacher is a daily thing, and that will be embedded.
My daughter sometimes says things in an Indian accent, a Kiwi accent or an American accent...and she is English. I think its hilarious and just part of the multi-cultural place we live in.
So she has the Expat accent then?
My daughter sometimes says things in an Indian accent, a Kiwi accent or an American accent...and she is English. I think its hilarious and just part of the multi-cultural place we live in.
surely, the Indian accent would only be a temporary addition -- I've never seen a kid keep one throughout childhood.
Sure? I heard that the accent a child picks up at primary stays with them forever. Also, since she will learn the phonics, beginning reading now; if she learns it wrong, is there any hope of correcting it later?
DD's K1 teacher was from Louisiana, and DD picked up her accent within a few weeks....it was very strong.
I think your child may pick up the accent and not sure that you can do much about it....and it will linger for a long time.
Wow, I am from Louisiana and happen to love my southern accent!! I don't think you are comparing apples to apples in this scenario.
My daughter started pronouncing words incorrectly since the 2 assistances mispronounced several words. That should be your worry.
I was not meaning anything bad about a Louisiana accent at all. Just making a point about picking up strong accents. We love it too!!
DD's K1 teacher was from Louisiana, and DD picked up her accent within a few weeks....it was very strong.
I think your child may pick up the accent and not sure that you can do much about it....and it will linger for a long time.
Wow, I am from Louisiana and happen to love my southern accent!! I don't think you are comparing apples to apples in this scenario.
My daughter started pronouncing words incorrectly since the 2 assistances mispronounced several words. That should be your worry.
LOL. I am an Australian and we say Haitch. I don't have the broad Australian accent though, I think Australian accent is hyped-up in the media. Anyway, that's another issue altogether. In the UK, I also heard some teachers say haitch.
Oops, sorry Tahm. Hope I haven't offended you.
<em>edited by Buy me a Pony on 30/01/2011</em>
Yes, I would be concerned and wouldn't like it as well. I have some friends in a similar situation with their daughter. Not sure what the solution is, just a consequence from the society we are living in.
<em>edited by Pomegranate on 30/01/2011</em>
No. Only (as Genie said) if the accent was so strong it was difficult to understand. Frankly I would rather my child picked up an Indian accent than some of the broader Australian accents I've heard, LOL!!!
My DS1 had a teacher who did not pronounce "H" correctly. She always said "Haitch". I am still correcting him. Yuk!!!
LOL. I am an Australian and we say Haitch. I don't have the broad Australian accent though, I think Australian accent is hyped-up in the media. Anyway, that's another issue altogether. In the UK, I also heard some teachers say haitch.
DD's K1 teacher was from Louisiana, and DD picked up her accent within a few weeks....it was very strong.
I think your child may pick up the accent and not sure that you can do much about it....and it will linger for a long time.
I ran a Kindergarten in Hong Kong and had this very problem presented to me, a Native English speaking child had picked up the Indian teacher's accent. The mother had no problem with the teacher or her methods. But moving a Native English speaking teaching assistant into the classroom did help.
She can understand but I am worried that she will pick it up (as we are trying to teach her a 2nd language at home). I have a friend whose child has a heavy indian accent (he picked up from school and maid) whereas the parents speak in American accent.
No. Only (as Genie said) if the accent was so strong it was difficult to understand. Frankly I would rather my child picked up an Indian accent than some of the broader Australian accents I've heard, LOL!!!
My DS1 had a teacher who did not pronounce "H" correctly. She always said "Haitch". I am still correcting him. Yuk!!!