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Teaching Your Child Hindi? Do Yourself a Favor -- Ditch the Hindi Script (for now)

June 28, 2017

Most Hindi apps and games out there want parents to teach their child Hindi out of order. They encourage script first and the ACTUAL LANGUAGE second.

This is a BIG mistake which can lead to a million different issues down the line.



Why the script-first approach makes the bilingual process harder?

For one, Devanagari is extremely different from the English script. It can be confusing and intimidating for your child (this is especially the case if they don't know how to speak or understand it yet).

Just to illustrate the point, read the below poem.

Regardez les branches

Comme elles sont blanches,

Il neige des fleurs.

Riant de la pluie

Le soleil essuie

les saules en pleurs.

Unless you speak French, the poem extract means nothing to you. You could probably sound out the letters and read it out loud -- but in reality, it is just jibberish.


This is what it is like if your kids do not understand or speak Hindi, but are taught the alphabet first. They can read the alphabet. Use the matras. But it means nothing if they cannot answer "aapka naam kya hai."

My Experience and Experiments

As an Indian who grew up in the US, my siblings and I started learning Hindi through conversation. We would talk to my grandmother in Hindi, watch movies, and learn new words by asking questions and actively using them. I only learnt the alphabet when I was older, when I understood a good chunk of what I was reading and writing.

When I started teaching -- with other Hindi schools -- they believed the alphabet was king. I would say "Ka" and the class would drolly repeat after me and I would provide some associated words like "kabutar" and "kachua."


Within a few months, about 60% of those students either lost interest in learning the language or continued to learn, but hated it. Essentially, they had given up -- and they hadn't even learnt anything of value yet.


If you want to teach your kid Hindi -- your success will increase TENFOLD, if you teach Devanagari LAST.

Why? I'm glad you asked!



Reasons to teach script last

Script is the least important part of the language


While learning Hindi script is important. It is actually just a tool to express a language you already know. That's why your child needs to actually learn that language first, then focus on reading and writing.

Learning Script Wastes Time

If you are like most parents, you don't have much time in your day that isn't filled with driving your kids around, doing homework, and eating. If you are going to commit yourself to teaching and encouraging your child in Hindi -- go straight for the meat and get them to start USING the language ASAP.

Get some real work done before you hit the "eyerolling" age. Let's be honest Hindi won't keep your kid's interest forever -- so get the real Hindi (conversation, words, sentence structure, answers, etc.) out of the way first.



Kids lose interest

Tracing a letter over and over is probably the least engaging activity a child can do. It is especially boring if they have no idea how the letter is used every day. Once your child finds soccer, dance or any other more engaging activity, Hindi will happily fall to the bottom or even fall off their list of to-dos completely.



Little to zero real world examples

Living outside India, kids rarely see Hindi script written on signs or on posters. And without being able to see Hindi script in real life, they won't be able to see their efforts pay off.



They can't show-off

Unless you carry around a chalkboard, your child cannot show off their Devanagari at the next family wedding. Sadly, your child will miss out on some very valuable positive reinforcement that would otherwise fuel them to keep learning.

Instead, imagine your kid spent all that "alphabet-memorizing-time" on learning words and phrases and conversation. They could talk to relatives, get positive reinforcement and keep learning by talking.



Letters don't extend the learning

Once you learn the alphabet, that's it, you're done. You could learn a few vocab words like "khargosh" or "kitaab" but it would stop there.

On the other hand, a child can learn a phrase -- and actually use it at a party or at a Indian restaurant. With each phrase, they would get two totally different answers that will teach them even more of the language.



What is a parent to do?

Forget the alphabet (for now) -- go straight to the core!

We need kids to believe that Hindi is a real language that can be used in everyday situations. It can't just be hard letters. It needs to come alive on TV, on the radio, through music, through dance and most important of all through conversation.

Don't get me wrong, Devanagiri is important to learn...LAST. Let your kids know what they are saying before they know how to read and write it.



What should replace Devanagiri?




    1. Teach your child how to introduce themselves


    1. Teach them 5 nouns that you think are important -- maybe kitaab, gaadi, joota, darvaza, kapRe.


    1. Go to my section on Actions and teach them useful verbs


    1. Watch Hindi movies or TV shows and explain some key words


    1. Find language worksheets and materials that work for you (I have a Free Resources tab you can use too).


      If you are interested in teaching your child Hindi, check out my tips, free materials and courses on www.HindiByReena.com.



Featured Image Source: Flickr

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About the author:
Reena Bhansali has been teaching Hindi for 5+ years and is the founder of Hindi By Reena, the only comprehensive online platform that teaches your child top-to-bottom Hindi -- using material that focuses on 1) immersion and 2) conversations they will encounter in real life.