This template was designed in partnership with eWebinar. Go to Leadpages.com/ewebinar to learn more about creating interactive automated webinars to grow your business without spending all your time on Zoom.
To see how to add an eWebinar form to your page, go to ewebinar.com/blog/leadpages or watch the video at www.youtube.com/watch?v=4iYQ-3GX9b8
NEW LIVE TRAINING
NEW LIVE TRAINING
NEW LIVE TRAINING
NEW LIVE TRAINING
Walk away with actionable tools to lighten the load, set more realistic goals, strengthen your child’s language skills, and make bilingual parenting a little more successful for your family.
You've got to be on the same page.
Successful bilingual parenting requires more than each parent speaking a language with their child. Yet too often, in dual-language families the entire responsibility for passing on a language falls on a single parent - especially if one parent can't speak the other's language.
1 in 3
families using the One Parent, One Language (OPOL) strategy will fail to raise a bilingual child.
30%
of families are able to successfully maintain the One Parent, One language (OPOL) strategy long-term.
4.1M+
marriages in the US are between one foreign-born and one native-born spouse mimicking increasing worldwide trends for dual-language families.
80%
of the mental load of parenting falls on one parent, including tasks of language planning and education.
In this live training, I’m pulling back the curtain on how I help families like yours navigate the mental load of bilingual parenting, create consistent language exposure, and set up systems that help both parents (the ones who speak the language and the ones who don’t) work together to optimize the chance of raising a child who actively speaks both their languages.
I’ll share insights from research on the mental load in bilingual parenting and give you strategies to lighten the load. You’ll learn how to handle these challenges with a clear, actionable plan, and how to balance the responsibility of bilingualism so you can reduce the chance of burning out and quitting bilingualism all together.
The pressure isn’t just on the language-speaking parent—it’s on both of you. I’ll share how monolingual parents can help their child’s bilingual development and I'll give you all the actionable tips I give my 1:1 clients that you can start implementing right away.
You've got to be on the same page if you want this to work long-term. I'll teach you my framework that you can use to communicate expectations, set goals, and hold each other accountable so that you continue to be a bilingual family for years to come.
Based on all the best tips from my 1:1 work with dual-language families, I'll gift you this practical guide to help you and your partner work together. It includes step-by-step planning worksheet, a partner support guide, conversation starters, and list of my top ways a non-target language speaking parent can actively support bilingual development. So both of you can feel confident in your roles and ensure your child gets the language input they need.
©2025 Bringing up Bilinguals. All rights reserved.