How young brains learn language
Have you ever wondered why it seems harder to learn a second language as an adult as a child?
How young brains learn language
Have you ever wondered why it seems harder to learn a second language as an adult as a child?
Researchers have learned through MRI mapping technology that our brains seem to process language learning differently as we grow older. As children learn a new language it stimulates the same part of the brain as their native language. However after about the age of 7, our brains start processing a new language from a different part of the brain.
In research volunteers who learned additional languages early in life, the studies indicate the brain processed the languages in the same area. For example, if a yellow area represents the Polish language, and a red area represents the English language, the study found a large orange area showing an overlap in the way the brain merges the language capabilities.
In research volunteers who learned additional languages later in life, the studies indicate the brain used a separate area of the brain to process the new language.
The Helen Doron Early English learning system takes advantage of this young brain learning in young children to teach them English in a natural mother-tongue method. Helen Doron Group has qualified Learning Centers in 23 countries around the globe, teaching the world’s children for over 20 years with amazing results.
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