posted on May, 16 2007 @ 02:07 PM
Children definitely learn and pick up things more quickly than older folks (hand a cell phone to a 12 year old versus a 45 year old and see who
masters it first, hah!), but languages especially! If you're going to learn a language (which, like I noted in my first post, I feel it's
unnecessary in the US, especially when folks are complaining how incompetent most of our students are in the CORE things like
math/composition/sciences) the earlier is definitely the better, but I agree it needs to be immersive to be effective.
I've read that if you don't learn certain languages (e.g. guttural languages) by the time you've reached puberty, you'll never be able to speak
the words of those languages quite correctly. I remember walking through Vienna (I'm born and raised American, only speak English fluently) with my
cousin (Dutch born and raised, speaks Dutch, German, English, French I know for certain, maybe more) when I was about 19 and he taught me a phrase to
use to beggars that are harrassing and following you in German. When I tried repeating it to him again and again he finally said "good enough"
(because he at least knew what I was trying to say.)
A few months later I was on a boat with a multinational group off of Stockholm, and languages somehow came up and I tried again and again to repeat
the phrase and nobody could tell what the heck I was trying to say. Unless you learn it young enough, it's very difficult to say things like "ich"
and "ach" and make them comprehendable.