- December 01, 2025
- By: Inlingua Baku
Why Start a Foreign Language Before Age 6?
The science is clear: the earlier a child is exposed to a second language, the more naturally and fluently they acquire it. Here is why — and how Inlingua Baku helps.
The critical period
Neuroscientists refer to the years between birth and age 7 as the "critical period" for language acquisition. During this window, the brain is at its most plastic — wiring itself for language in a way that becomes progressively harder after puberty.
Children who are exposed to a second language before age 6 typically acquire it without an accent, with natural grammar intuition and with far less conscious effort than adults require.
It is not about sitting at a desk
Early language learning for young children is nothing like adult classes. It is play, songs, stories, games and movement. The language is embedded in fun, meaningful activity — which is exactly how the brain stores it most durably.
At Inlingua Baku, our DOTS First English programme (from age 1) and our 3–6 Russian programme are built entirely around this principle. Children are never asked to memorise; they are invited to play, sing and interact — in the target language, from lesson one.
Benefits beyond language
Research consistently shows that bilingual children develop stronger executive function, better attention control, improved problem-solving skills and greater cultural empathy. Learning a second language early is an investment in your child's whole cognitive development, not just their language skills.
When is the right time to start?
The honest answer: as early as possible. But it is also never too late. If your child is older, the communicative Inlingua method still produces excellent results — it just relies more on explicit learning alongside natural acquisition.