If you've ever tried to teach a toddler colors in
Spanish, you know how it usually goes. You point at something red and say rojo.
They look at you blankly. You try again. They wander off to find something more
interesting. You quietly abandon the lesson and tell yourself you'll try again
next week.
The problem isn't the child. It's the method. Pointing
and labeling works for some things, but color words in particular are abstract
— rojo doesn't mean anything to a three-year-old until they've
encountered it in enough contexts for the word to feel real. And that takes
repetition. A lot of repetition. The kind that flashcards and drills can
technically provide, but not without a fight.














