

Two Adolescent Brain-Based Teaching Strategies in the Foreign Language Classroom
While I was a student at a community college in San Antonio, Texas, I took an Arabic language course. The professor, a native speaker...


Areas of the Brain Activated When Learning Signed Languages
I found this week’s Schunk (2012) chapter to be absolutely fascinating! The readings made me curious as to whether the same regions of...
![3 Domains of Learning in the Language Classroom: Affective, Cognitive, & Psychomotor [Infographic]](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/297a08_7343caca7b224528b392bea5b4ab4dcc~mv2.jpg/v1/fill/w_332,h_250,fp_0.50_0.50,q_30,blur_30,enc_avif,quality_auto/297a08_7343caca7b224528b392bea5b4ab4dcc~mv2.webp)
![3 Domains of Learning in the Language Classroom: Affective, Cognitive, & Psychomotor [Infographic]](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/297a08_7343caca7b224528b392bea5b4ab4dcc~mv2.jpg/v1/fill/w_319,h_240,fp_0.50_0.50,q_90,enc_avif,quality_auto/297a08_7343caca7b224528b392bea5b4ab4dcc~mv2.webp)
3 Domains of Learning in the Language Classroom: Affective, Cognitive, & Psychomotor [Infographic]
Sign language is a tactile language. Thus, it is quite natural for a sign language lesson plan to operate mainly in the psychomotor domain.


Language Learning: Cognitive Domain or Psychomotor Domain?
While language learning is often considered a mainly cognitive task, in many ways the psychomotor domain is a better fit for teaching visual