Respuesta :
The face of the United States is changing, and so are many of your early childhood classrooms. As racial, cultural, and linguistic diversity increases, so does the importance of your role in teaching children to live and work together respectfully. In this article, you'll find suggestions and strategies for doing just that. Read on for advice on working with all children and families, fostering bilingualism, and encouraging tolerance and self-esteem.
What is common in all cultures about children learning to speak is the fact that their first sounds are similar in all cultures.
Linguists have studied all 5000 languages of the world, and they noticed that all languages use the vowel sound aah, ee, and ooh which are the same vowel sounds a baby produces first.
So we can say that, although each baby learn at his own speed, all of them produce the same first words in all cultures.