Ways to Practice Your ASL
Daily Practice Ideas
- Mirror practice – Sign in front of a mirror to check facial expressions and hand movements.
- Fingerspelling drills – Practice the ASL alphabet with random words (try street names, brands, or your grocery list).
- Sign your daily routine – Narrate what you’re doing in ASL (e.g., “I eat breakfast,” “I go to work,” etc.).
- Label objects around the house with their ASL sign or fingerspelled name.
- Use ASLdeafined.com or another ASL platform for guided lessons, retention games, and expressive practice.
- Sign a song or poem – Interpret lyrics or poetry using expressive ASL.
- Record yourself signing and review to self-correct or compare with models.
- Sign along to TV with captions (mute it, then check accuracy).
- Pick a “Sign of the Day” and use it at least 5 times throughout the day.
- Keep a visual ASL journal – Record short daily signed video entries.
Practice With Others
- Practice with a friend or study group – Set up regular sessions to sign together.
- Join a Deaf event or Silent Dinner – Practice in immersive social settings.
- Attend ASL Meetups – Find or organize informal gatherings with other signers.
- Take turns signing a story – Each person adds a part in ASL.
- Use video chat with signing friends or tutors (Zoom, Marco Polo, Glide).
- Teach basic signs to family or roommates – Practice with them daily.
Classroom or Study-Based Practice
- Use flashcards (physical or digital) with signs, definitions, and example sentences.
- Do expressive and receptive exercises – Watch signed videos and answer questions in ASL.
- Practice classifiers, NMMs, or rhetorical questions with themed prompts.
- Play ASL games (e.g., charades, ASL Bingo, Go Fish with signed numbers/colors).
- Create glossed scripts of conversations and perform them.
Creative Practice
- Storytelling in ASL – Retell a fairy tale or real story using classifiers and NMMs.
- Make ASL TikToks or Instagram Reels – Share short clips to get feedback.
- Create ASL comics or captioned photo stories with drawn or signed characters.
- Translate children’s books or signs around your neighborhood into ASL.
- Sign recipes as you cook – Narrate steps using signs.
Technology-Based Practice
- Watch Deaf creators on YouTube or TikTok – Observe authentic use of ASL.
- Use ASL apps (like ASLdeafined, The ASL App, or SignSchool, ).
- Watch stories and vlogs in ASL and try to summarize them.
- Play ASL-based games online – memory match, flashcard challenges, etc.