Total Length: 1254 words ( 4 double-spaced pages)
Total Sources: 3
Page 1 of 4
Ianco-Worrell (1972), for example, found that children who are exposed to a bilingual environment from an early age are more skilled at learning new words and their meanings in their first language.
Of course, there are other ways to help children increase their vocabulary in their first language. However, those other methods do not also bestow the many other benefits of bilingualism. And while there are additional costs to bilingual classrooms, proficiency in a second language helps students gain admission to universities as well as to be more competitive in the job market.
Students who become bilingual early on in school will bring those skills to the workplace and improve workplace productivity. Speaking multiple languages offers a competitive edge in the job market and provides a cultural bridge for successful workplace relations. Because of this, demand for bilingual speakers in the workplace is increasing and bilingual communication skills increase economic competitiveness for the individual, the company, and the nation. When Jennings (1987) wrote that bilingualism had become -- already a generation ago -- as important and math and analytic skills, he was writing presciently of needs that would only grow. While those skills too remain important, as the world grows more inter-related, language skills have become increasingly important, a fact reflected by the push that other nations are making to teach their students foreign languages.
Finally, bilingualism allows for peaceful conflict resolution. Being able to communicate in another person's native language increases clear communication and facilitates conflict resolution and effective conflict resolution depends on cross-cultural understanding in the new global workplace. While many workplace environments have resources specifically for effective conflict resolution these can always be effectively supplemented and expanded through bilingualism. Research demonstrates that while some bilingual skills tend to improve productivity, full bilingualism can make workplaces fundamentally more conflict free, with benefits for both individuals and the company as a whole (Padilla 2002).
Works Cited
Baker, Colin. Foundations of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism. (4th ed.) Multingual Matters: Buffalo. 2006.
The author provides a broad overview of the complexities involving teaching students in two languages at once and various possible ways to go about doing this. He also touches on the important issue of how to maintain the viability of minority languages.
Bilingual Education. Bilingual education. Retrieved from