Je parle francais comme une vache espagnole
Asking if everyone in Canada speaks French is NOT a dumb question, but the answer is no. It's very region-specific. Some cursory Googling reveals that only 17.9% of Canadians are bilingual in English and French. Only 44.5% of Quebec residents are bilingual, which surprises me. 71.2% are first-language Francophones, so maybe a lot of them are not fully bilingual?
Apparently only 11.2% of Ontarians are French-English bilingual, which I also would have guessed to be higher. BC, Alberta and Saskatchewan are 7%, 7% and 5% respectively - I figured they'd be the lowest. The Yukon is 10.3% - would have guessed lower. Wait, Nunavut is 4.3%, so they're actually the lowest.
The title of the post translates literally as "I speak French like a Spanish cow", which means "I speak French badly". I took French in school all the way through high school, but core French, not immersion like my own kids. I took a course or two in French at university and it was a frigging disaster - I did okay but it was constantly extremely stressful and humiliating. One of my professors called me and said "I don't think your French is good enough to take the course in French" and I said "probably not, but here we are". I was doing a masters in Comparative Literature, which meant you needed at least one extra language, preferably two. I sailed through beginner's German but I couldn't get past a certain level in French, partly because of lack of confidence. It was a massive relief to drop it finally.
We really wanted our kids to be in French immersion if possible just because younger minds are more receptive to a new language and why not be bilingual if you can? Fortunately they both took to it well, maybe partly because we just didn't mention that not everyone didn't do school half in French. It was halfway through grade one before Angus said "I think where Nathan goes to school they only speak English", in a "what's up with that" tone. Yeah, it was a gamble, but it mostly paid off.
Happily, my French was mostly good enough to be able to help the kids with their homework through elementary school. I did lose a lot of my vocabulary in the meantime - once I was volunteering and at one point Angus ran out of glue and I tried to tell him maybe he could borrow Emma's, and then I said to the teacher "did I just suggest that he could wear Emma's glue?" and she patted my shoulder comfortingly. Matt had a rougher time - he sometimes jotted notes to the teacher saying "this is pretty tough for an English-speaking dude!", and naturally the kids were merciless. He was trying to quiz Angus about body parts once; in French "les yeux" is the eyes. Trying to ask about one eye, he said "un yeu", which was a reasonable extrapolation, however ONE eye is actually 'un oeil', so he took some grief over that. For a dictation, he pronounced "quand" ('when') phonetically, like the beginning of 'quantifiable', when the 'qu' is actually pronounced like 'k'. That one haunted him for a while.
Regarding the weekly dictations, sometimes it seemed like the English stream kids got words like cat, rat, sat, bat and fat, whereas our kids dictées had words like 'naufrage', 'pamplemousse' and 'caoutchouc'. It was rough. Sometimes the weekly reading books Angus would bring home were super hard. Once I said "could you pick something a little simpler next time? I can read French, but not, like Shakespeare in French." He whipped the book closed and looked at the cover and said "THIS is SHAKESPEARE?" He was better at French than metaphors.
One of Matt's funniest experiences with bilingual students was being in a sports store where the teenager at the counter was serving him in typical sullen, monotone teenager fashion. Then someone else came up and spoke in French, and the teenager switched to sullen, monotone service but now in French.
I don't think either of my kids is likely to ever work in French, although I have no idea where Eve will eventually end up. They both dropped French immersion in grade ten because math in the higher grades was only in English, and some kids were seeing marks drop sharply going from French to English (according to my teacher friend), and both kids were math/science oriented, so we thought it would be wiser to go to English earlier. But I was shopping with Eve one day when she was about thirteen and she was talking about different words and expressions in French and English and then she said "It's so much fun being bilingual. I enjoy it very much" - and it just seemed like such a simple, lovely reason to learn another language.
Comments
I LOVE France, and have been twice in the last 5 years. Thankfully the only place our bad French was an issue was out at the Brittany coast. Everywhere else, people spoke English, especially if we asked nicely.
It's great that your kids are bilingual, what a gift.
"Did I just ask if he could wear Emma's glue?" And Anugus being better at foreign language than metaphor. Too funny. I had no idea your kids were immersed in French in their schools. Sounds like a really great experience.
In a word, I suck at foreign language. I took 2 or 3 years of french in high school and I struggled. A lot. I went to Montreal with Reg for World Championships of Irish dancing, because the dancing school forced us to go. Long story. He and I were there long enough for him to compete. We raced back to join the rest of the fam in DC for our regularly scheduled spring break trip. Anyway, I didn't do a lot of research for the Canada component of the trip and I was surprised at the number of French speaking people.
My Comp Lit languages were English, Spanish, and Latin for undergrad and English, Spanish, and Portuguese for my Master's and Phd. I have retained very little Latin or Portuguese as it was just a few classes each, but my Spanish is half decent, better for reading than speaking. It was best right after my semester in Spain junior year of college. When my kids were in immersion I found my grammar and vocabulary was still better than theirs, but their accents were better.
Also, I'm a little shocked by the low numbers of French speakers in Canada. I sort of assumed they'd be much higher. Huh. I wonder what the numbers are in the US. I bet it's super duper low!
My husband and I both took French in high school and college. He is better at understanding French and speaking it -- and he has a magical ear that allows him to pronounce things like native speakers do. I sound like a parody of a dumb uncultured American speaking French, and I cannot conjugate a verb to save my life, but I have a decent vocab. I did not know "naufrage" or "caoutchouc" though!
I do wish my daughter had been able to participate in an immersion program, but I am not aware of any around here. (That doesn't mean they don't exist, I suppose.) She is learning Mandarin in school, which means that I will never be able to help her. Languages are not my forte. Except English. I'm decent with English.
My husband was growing up with German and Spanish and then went to an international school where he had classes in English and French. It sounds so good. But also stressful.
How about we practice some of your German? :)