10 episodes

A journey into bilingual parenting, how language grows inside our babies, and how kids can grow up learning one, two, or many languages.

Hosted by parents Elaine and Héctor, a biology teacher and a language teacher respectively, Petit Sounds is an informative show for parents and linguistics enthusiasts, sprinkled with music and humour.

Petit Sounds Petit Sounds

    • Education

A journey into bilingual parenting, how language grows inside our babies, and how kids can grow up learning one, two, or many languages.

Hosted by parents Elaine and Héctor, a biology teacher and a language teacher respectively, Petit Sounds is an informative show for parents and linguistics enthusiasts, sprinkled with music and humour.

    Chapter Nine: Trilingualism at home

    Chapter Nine: Trilingualism at home

    Héctor and Elaine became parents just a few months after COVID lockdowns were introduced, which brought about some challenges in their one-parent one-language plans.

    As remote working brought English into more non-native speakers’ homes, Elaine and Héctor were well-equipped tor trilingual child-raising. But their guest for this episode, Ilaria Zambotti, has taken a different approach.

    Links

    Trilingualism in Family, School and Community

    • 26 min
    Chapter Eight: Music and Language

    Chapter Eight: Music and Language

    Around 90% of the world’s languages are tonal, meaning that unlike English, Spanish, or German, tone patterns are used to distinguish words and inflections. Speakers of tonal languages like Mandarin are more likely to develop perfect pitch, meaning they can tell what note is being played, without needing to hear another for reference.

    In this episode, Héctor and Elaine explore music, tone, and its relationship to language learning.

    Links

    Learning the "Special Note": Evidence for a Critical Period for Absolute Pitch Acquisition
    Critical period hypothesis
    Scotch Snaps in Hip Hop, by Adam Neely
    Music, Language, and the Brain, by Aniruddh D Patel
    A Generative Theory of Tonal Music, by Fred Lerdahl and Ray Jackendoff
    The Potential Role of Music in Second Language Learning, by Ieva Zeromskaite

    • 16 min
    Chapter Seven: How to help bilingual and multilingual children in their language journey

    Chapter Seven: How to help bilingual and multilingual children in their language journey

    In this episode, Héctor and Elaine explore some of the questions you might want to consider when raising a child in a bilingual household:

    Do you speak your partner’s language?

    If not, are you willing to learn?

    Do you live near other native speakers of your heritage language?

    If you do, you can organise playdates to help with the language learning process. And if you aren’t so lucky, technology can help bridge the gap. A call with a relative can give them more exposure.

    Elaine and Héctor also discuss the different opportunities for language learning that present themselves all the way through your child’s young life.

    • 16 min
    Chapter Six: How babies and children learn words

    Chapter Six: How babies and children learn words

    In this episode, Héctor and Elaine explore nouns, how babies learn to identify them before being able to pronounce them, then eventually form the words themselves.

    They examine the categories of words babies are able to understand at key development stages, and how those categories start off fuzzy – with “mama” meaning simply “woman” – and become clearer over time.

    Also, Héctor shares his approach to helping children with their phonemic awareness.

    Links

    Child Language: Acquisition and Development, by Matthew Saxton
    Priming overgeneralizations in two- and four-year-old children

    • 18 min
    Chapter Five: The good, the bad and the false of bilingualism

    Chapter Five: The good, the bad and the false of bilingualism

    In this episode, Héctor and Elaine explore the myths, advantages, and potential disadvantages around being bilingual or multilingual. They are joined by applied linguist Friederike Sell, an expert in language learning and multilingualism.

    As a non-native English speaker, Héctor is able to use his native Spanish language skills to decode some of the morphemes within English speech, and find meaning behind words that native English speakers might not know.

    Links

    The Cambridge Handbook of Child Language
    How Language Shapes the Way We Think, a TED talk by Lera Borodotsky
    Benjamin Whorf
    The Language Hoax: Why the World Looks the Same in Any Language, by John McWhorter
    Change of Language, Change of Personality? by Francois Grosjean

    • 35 min
    Chapter Four: On syntax and how children put words together

    Chapter Four: On syntax and how children put words together

    It might not take long for your baby to go from speaking their first words to combining them, but the way they do so is more exploratory than you might think. In this fourth episode, Elaine and Héctor take a look at syntax: verbs, nouns, adjectives, and adverbs.

    Humans aren't unique in identifying speech sounds. We all know that parrots can replicate speech, but dogs have been known to identify objects by name, cats can recognise their owner's voice, and even African elephants have been able to identify the sounds of speech.

    Links

    A dynamic systems approach to babbling and words
    Elephants can determine ethnicity, gender, and age from acoustic cues in human voices

    • 22 min

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