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‘A superpower’: How being bilingual can help kids thrive in Danish schools

Being bilingual can help children to prosper academically when they are encouraged at school and at home, an expert told The Local.

'A superpower': How being bilingual can help kids thrive in Danish schools
Providing an encouraging environment can help bilingual kids to thrive. Photo by Jonathan Borba on Unsplash

A recent report in Denmark linked a lack of Danish spoken at home and lower economic status with poorer performance at school, but bilingualism in isolation is an advantage under the right conditions, a specialist in the area told The Local on Friday.

Around 40 percent of school students with immigrant backgrounds were considered to be underperforming in mathematics, reading and science. That compares to 16 percent of students with non-immigrant backgrounds, according to the report “PISA Etnisk 2022”, published this week by research and analysis institute VIVE (National Research and Analysis Center for Welfare).

For all students, regardless of heritage, socioeconomic status was a factor in school performance. In other words, students from strong socioeconomic positions achieve better PISA results on average than those from weaker socioeconomic positions.

The report states that the language spoken at home may also have an effect on school results, with students who speak some Danish at home more likely to achieve better results – although this effect is reduced when socioeconomic status is taken into account.

READ ALSO: Kids who don’t speak Danish at home ‘may find school harder’

However, the report may not identify the difference individual situations can make for parents, an expert in raising bilingual children told The Local.

Bilingual kids given the right encouragement and support at home and school are in fact likely to thrive, said Elisa Sievers, a cultural consultant and founder of Happy Children Denmark. 

Sievers, who noted she had not read the VIVE report specifically, has observed bilingual schools and studied evidence on teaching multilingual children, at the Institute for Minority Education at University College South Denmark. 

Larger studies don’t always look at “the kids’ class or socioeconomics, where they actually come from, how long they’ve been in Denmark or what kind of resources the family has,” she said, adding that a number of different factors, like the languages spoken and whether the parents speak Danish, can create different circumstances contributing to results.

Being bilingual “doesn’t take the academic level of a child down, quite the opposite,” Sievers said. “It’s really about creating a space where children feel seen and feel that all parts of their identity and their language skills are embraced, then the child’s full potential can get out and they can thrive and have better academic results.”

“If a child is not thriving then they won’t perform super well academically either.”

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Difficulties can arise if bilingualism is framed negatively by educators, parents or others, such as “questioning whether [the child] speaks any language perfectly,” Sievers said.

“That will affect the way the child is behaving and the way the child wants to perform and experiment with learning languages in general.”

“If there’s a positive, embracing space where the child can develop and use their language skills in a positive way”, they will be able to thrive, she said.

To create an “embracing” environment for bilingual children, Sievers advocates parents “staying authentic”, meaning each parent being consistent about speaking in their own mother tongue.

“It’s important that while the children are small and learning to speak that parents stick to that, and then they can be more loose later when the child knows the two languages,” she said.

At school, teachers can “make a point of the child having a special skill” by encouraging use of the second language.

An example of this could be asking the child to explain something about their language or background to the rest of the class.

“Seeing the language background, talk about it as something positive and something that is a superpower for the child instead of being a problem,” she said.

Elisa Sievers has a monthly newsletter, with tips for teachers and parents of bilingual and trilingual children.

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SCHOOLS

Kids who don’t speak Danish at home ‘may find school harder’

Socioeconomic status and whether Danish is spoken at home are both factors when it comes to school performance among students with immigrant backgrounds, the authors of a Danish report have concluded.

Kids who don't speak Danish at home 'may find school harder'

School students with immigrant backgrounds generally perform worse than students with non-immigrant backgrounds but the difference has shrunk, a new Danish report has concluded.

The report which has the title “PISA Etnisk 2022”, follows on from this year’s earlier report on schools, Pisa 2022. It has special focus on children with “immigrant backgrounds” (defined as children whose parents were both born outside of Denmark) and was produced at the request of the Ministry of Education.

The reports were produced by research and analysis institute VIVE (National Research and Analysis Center for Welfare).

According to the report, some 40 percent of school students with immigrant backgrounds were considered to be underperforming in mathematics, reading and science. That compares to 16 percent of students with non-immigrant backgrounds.

READ ALSO: Why Copenhagen is one of the cheapest cities in the world to attend international school

The difference in performance has shrunk in both maths and science but remained the same in reading, VIVE said in a summary of the report released on Thursday.

“The explanation of the smaller gap is not that students with immigrant backgrounds are now scoring better results – it’s because other students have dropped on average,” senior researcher Louise Beuchert says in the released summary.

“Students with immigrant backgrounds have also dropped [in performance], but not by as much,” she added.

For all students, regardless of heritage, socioeconomic status is a factor in school performance. In other words, students from strong socioeconomic positions achieve better PISA results on average than those from weaker socioeconomic positions.

“There are more factors at play than just immigrant background,” as Beuchert puts it in the summary.

READ ALSO:

Socioeconomic background, related to the educational and professional status of the parents, is therefore highly significant when it comes to PISA results.

“There’s a greater proportion of students with immigrant background which come from socioeconomically weaker homes, and that is a significant part of the explanation for why they score lower than other students,” Beuchert said.

“When we take into account the socioeconomic background of the students and the language spoken at home, the average points different between students with and without immigrant background is halved,” she said.

The language spoken at home may also have an effect, with students who speak some Danish at home more likely to achieve better results – although this effect is reduced when socioeconomic status is taken into account.

The conclusions of the report state that “when the pupils’ socio-economic background is taken into account, and partly whether Danish is spoken at home, the competence gap between pupils with and without an immigrant background is halved.”

An additional conclusion of the report is that the majority of students with immigrant backgrounds do well at schools and are supported by their teachers. However, non-immigrant background students have better feelings of belonging, particularly in relation to the extent to which they feel ‘at home’ at school.

PISA, which stands for Programme for International Student Assessment, is an international study of maths, reading and science skills among 15-year-old school students. Some 81 countries took part in the international study in 2022.

In Denmark, around 7,800 students from 347 schools took part, of which 10.7 percent are of immigrant background. It is this last segment which was the focus of the second Danish report produced by VIVE, PISA Etnisk 2022.

The 2022 PISA report was the eighth to be completed and also includes a review of trends since 2012.

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