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Teacher's accent...would you?

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EW NEWBIE
Latest post on 30 January 2011 - 13:22
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.
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EW EXPERT
Latest post on 30 January 2011 - 13:20
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?
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EW GURU
Latest post on 30 January 2011 - 13:18
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.
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EW NEWBIE
Latest post on 30 January 2011 - 13:17
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?
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EW NEWBIE
Latest post on 30 January 2011 - 13:15
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!!
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EW NEWBIE
Latest post on 30 January 2011 - 13:11
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.
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EW GURU
Latest post on 30 January 2011 - 13:06
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>
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EW NEWBIE
Latest post on 30 January 2011 - 13:05
surely, the Indian accent would only be a temporary addition -- I've never seen a kid keep one throughout childhood.
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EW GURU
Latest post on 30 January 2011 - 13:02
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>
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EW NEWBIE
Latest post on 30 January 2011 - 13:01
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.
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EW NEWBIE
Latest post on 30 January 2011 - 12:59
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.
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EW NEWBIE
Latest post on 30 January 2011 - 12:57
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.
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EW NEWBIE
Latest post on 30 January 2011 - 12:55
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.
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EW GURU
Latest post on 30 January 2011 - 12:53
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!!!
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EW GURU
Latest post on 30 January 2011 - 12:50
Only if it was unintelligble (whatever accent is was) and the child could not understand. Otherwise why on earth would it matter?
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EW EXPERT
Latest post on 30 January 2011 - 12:50
why is it an issue? Can you daughter not understand her?
 
 

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