Choosing a family language strategy
Pick a plan your household can actually keep
Families raising a bilingual baby usually settle on one of a few well-tested approaches. None is the single 'correct' one — the best strategy is the one your household can actually keep up day after day.
One-parent-one-language (OPOL): each parent consistently speaks their own language to the baby, so the child learns to associate each language with a person. Minority-language-at-home (ML@H): the whole family speaks Arabic at home, since the host-country language is easy for the child to pick up outside anyway. Both are described in the bilingualism research as workable paths (Byers-Heinlein & Lew-Williams, 2013) — the common thread across successful families is steady, predictable exposure, not a single 'right' method.
What matters most when choosing a family language strategy?