That's actually fairly interesting.
Took a look at the Wikipedia entry for the Cherokee language. That's going to be one steep crash course in comparative grammar! If the girls learn Cherokee, they can pretty much learn any language through sheer force of will, I'm thinking!
There seem to be comparatively few publicly available study materials, though. It would be nice if we could have a simple collection of, I don't know, children's stories or a webcomic or something for vocabulary practice in between the end of the spring term and the start of the next one. But probably I'm putting the cart before the horse here. (Well, there are only about, what, 15,000 native speakers? And from what I read, their immersion school is pretty new as well, so they're still developing their own materials for their own kids.)
Took a look at the Wikipedia entry for the Cherokee language. That's going to be one steep crash course in comparative grammar! If the girls learn Cherokee, they can pretty much learn any language through sheer force of will, I'm thinking!
There seem to be comparatively few publicly available study materials, though. It would be nice if we could have a simple collection of, I don't know, children's stories or a webcomic or something for vocabulary practice in between the end of the spring term and the start of the next one. But probably I'm putting the cart before the horse here. (Well, there are only about, what, 15,000 native speakers? And from what I read, their immersion school is pretty new as well, so they're still developing their own materials for their own kids.)