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Life Kit has tips on raising kids bilingually and the benefits it can provide

SCOTT DETROW, HOST:

About 22% of people in the U.S. ages 5 and older speak a language other than English at home. And for parents who are short on time and already keeping multiple plates spinning, raising a child bilingually can feel like an additional hurdle. For NPR's Life Kit, Julia Furlan talked to experts who say that raising kids bilingually doesn't have to be expensive or exhausting.

LEO: (Speaking Portuguese).

JULIA FURLAN, BYLINE: (Speaking Portuguese).

LEO: (Speaking Portuguese).

FURLAN: (Speaking Portuguese).

LEO: (Speaking Portuguese).

Watching my toddler speak English and Portuguese somehow blows my mind every time. But aside from being cute, there's actually a whole laundry list of benefits to being bilingual, according to Farwa Husain, who's a bilingual speech pathologist who speaks Hindi, Urdu and English.

FARWA HUSAIN: First of all, it's so fun to be able to speak another language.

FURLAN: Husain says that there are also improvements in cognitive function.

HUSAIN: There are better problem-solving skills, and actually, research says it delays the onset of dementia as well if you are bilingual.

FURLAN: The study that Husain is citing says that being bilingual may delay the onset of dementia by up to five years. Though, I should say that the results are inconclusive when it comes to learning a language much later in life. So let's talk about what it takes to raise multilingual kids. Liliana Diaz is a bilingual speech pathologist who works in Spanish and English. Diaz says it's actually pretty simple.

LILIANA DIAZ: It's consistency and exposure and practice. So it's all about just practice, practice, practice and exposing your little one to it as well, too.

FURLAN: She also says that there's no one way to do it.

DIAZ: You know, it's going to be different in every family, and that's OK. That's totally fine. No bilingual is the same. Like, there literally will not be a bilingual person that is the same as the next. So it's totally fine is usually what I tell parents.

FURLAN: So let's go through some of the most common techniques. There's one parent-one language, which is what I do with my kid, Leo (ph). I speak to her in Portuguese, and my spouse, Steph (ph) speaks to her in English. There's also minority language at home. Time and place is another way to do it. Here's Husain again.

HUSAIN: You block the day, where in the mornings, maybe you're speaking one language, then you're speaking another.

FURLAN: The last of these techniques is called multiple languages at home, which is pretty self-explanatory. It may sound confusing, but really, it's not a problem.

HUSAIN: Children are wonderfully resilient, and they will start picking up on how you are providing them that input. And they are so great at being able to tease apart the ways and the languages together.

FURLAN: And while we're on the topic of confusion, before we go, I have to bust one common myth here. I dug into the research, and I spoke to experts. And if there's one thing you need to know, it's this...

HUSAIN: That myth of bilingualism creating a language delay is totally false.

FURLAN: This idea is so prevalent, but the research just doesn't back it up. Husain sees it all the time, where parents are worried that being multilingual will somehow set a child back.

HUSAIN: What research says is when the child acquires those - both those languages, they're at age level with their monolingual peers.

FURLAN: Bilingualism isn't a burden that you're adding to your life. It's actually a key that unlocks entirely new worlds.

LEO: (Inaudible).

FURLAN: As a parent, you don't always know you're doing the right thing, but watching my kid connect with her cousins on FaceTime or sing a song my grandmother used to love, it feels really nice. For NPR News, I'm Julia Furlan.

(SOUNDBITE OF BEQUEM'S "FEELING GOOD") Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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