You have probably heard the joke:
What do you call someone who speaks three languages?
Tri-lingual.
What do you call someone who speaks two languages?
Bi-lingual.
What do you call someone who speaks one language? American.
Although a joke, it elicits serious questions about whether United
States residents, on average, fall below par on multi-lingual ability. It also perhaps
relates to the perception that we Americans less often carry a passport than do
the people of most other developed countries.
At a meeting this morning with government, foundation, and
business leaders, Mayor RT Rybak asked: “Shouldn’t we start to view
multi-lingual competency as an asset, rather than a deficit?” A child who
speaks a language other than English may need a few years to master the English
language. However, the Mayor wondered out loud, once having learned English,
doesn’t this child and similar others offer our region some competitive
advantages within the globalized economy in which we live?
Greater language facility means greater capacity to
understand foreign markets, more ability to communicate with customers in
different countries. It means that we can work more efficiently, with fewer
errors and greater productivity, in endeavors that require collaboration among
people on different parts of the globe.
Speaking two languages, some research suggests, can enhance the
“executive function” of children’s brains – that is, the higher level abilities
that influence other critical processes such as attention, memory, and motor
skills. Executive function enables human beings to initiate and stop actions,
to plan for the future, to adapt behavior to changing circumstances, and to
form concepts and think abstractly.
Research has shown that students who speak two languages can
more accurately solve problems involving misleading cues. In addition, research
has indicated that people who know how to use multiple languages, and therefore
must manipulate their minds to bring one language to the fore, depending on the
situation, develop skills that can support other mental processes and social
interaction. Evidence suggests that they can better resolve conflicts; they can
more perceptively monitor their environment. A recent study in the Journal of
Neuroscience even suggests that speaking two languages might prevent
Alzheimer’s and other age-related declines in “neural efficiency for cognitive
control processes.”
So, the Mayor may have some good insight. Perhaps all of us
should pick up another language, if we want to stay healthy and live longer.
And, we should appreciate the collective potential of a multi-lingual Twin
Cities, as we move forward in the twenty-first century.
I once printed as many words as I could find in a couple of hours one morning,
for the word “peace.” I will print them again:
Paix (French)
Paz (Spanish)
Frieden (German)
ειρήνη (Greek)
和平 (Chinese)
Vrede (Dutch)
Vrede (Afrikaans)
Pace (Italian)
平和 (Japanese)
평화 (Korean)
Paz (Portuguese)
мир (Russian)
أمان (طمأنينة) (Arabic)
Mir (Croatian)
ukuthula (Zulu)
àlàáfíà (Yoruba)
kev sib haum xeeb (Hmong)
nabad (Somali)
3 comments:
Brilliant, Paul, thank you for your inspiration!
Not only does it increase executive function, but also increases understanding of other cultures, as well as one's own. Language is the keyhole into another's worldview.
Yes. Culture matters. We're impressed by the cultural competence of Wilder Research. Keep up good work.
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