Bilingual Argumentative Essay

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Could you read the title of this paper? If your answer was no, you’re not alone. Most high schools today offer at least one foreign language course, whether it is Spanish, French, German, Latin, or all of the above, and yet statistics show that only about 18% of Americans in the U.S. speak a language besides English (Christian 24). Now with almost every high school student being required to take a foreign language course, why is this percentage is so low? Teenagers spend a year or two (or more) struggling, and often failing, to relearn everything they have ever been taught about reading and writing, and a vast majority forget it all the moment they get handed their high school diplomas. Students in the United States just aren’t convinced that becoming bilingual is worth their time, even though high school students in other countries are often fluent in two or more languages by the time they graduate. In the rest of the world, knowledge of multiple languages is not only more prominent, it is expected. It is thought that a person is not fully educated unless they are fluent in more than one language (Christian 29). A survey showed that in nineteen prominent world countries, bilingualism begins in elementary school, as early as six years old and no later than twelve years old, whereas in the U.S., foreign languages aren’t …show more content…

However, people in other countries that have never had the luxury of a formal education would likely have never heard English, and if the student’s career led them into international affairs, being bilingual would be invaluable, if not required. In this case, adults would have to learn a new language from scratch, and squeezing in time to learn in the midst of an already hectic schedule would be difficult, so already having at least a background would be immensely

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