Setting Meaningful ASL Resolutions in the New Year

Setting Meaningful ASL Resolutions in the New Year

By Jillian Winn
Monday, January 5, 2026

The start of a new year often brings a renewed sense of intention. Many of us think about goals, resolutions, and the changes we want to make, both big and small. Language learning is a goal that shows up again and again, and for good reason. It opens doors to connection, understanding, and inclusion.

If learning American Sign Language is one of your goals this year, you are already moving in a meaningful direction.

Signing Resolution: A Goal

American Sign Language is focused on signing meaning. To sign "resolution", as in a goal you want to work toward, you would use the sign for GOAL.

To sign GOAL, start with your dominant hand near your forehead in the 1 handshape. Then point it toward your non-dominant hand, which is in front of your body, slightly above your head, also in the 1 handshape. Think about aiming toward your goal with purpose and intention. That is exactly how language learning works.

Language grows through use, repetition, and time.

ASL is not something you finish. It is something you build.

Why Small Daily Practice Works

Research on language learning consistently shows that short, regular practice is more effective than long, infrequent study sessions. Even just a few minutes a day helps strengthen memory, improve recall, and build confidence over time.

In other words, learning a little every day really does add up.

That might look like:

  • Looking up a sign when you need it

  • Watching how a sign is used in a full sentence

  • Practicing fingerspelling names

  • Signing during everyday routines with your children

These small moments create momentum.

Rethinking Resolutions

Many language resolutions are too big to be sustainable. Goals like “be fluent” or “learn everything” can feel motivating at first, but they often lead to frustration.

Instead, try goals that focus on consistency and confidence:

These goals are realistic, flexible, and powerful.

Support Makes a Difference

Another key factor in successful language learning is access to accurate resources and authentic language models. Learning from native ASL signers, seeing real ASL in context, and having tools you can return to again and again all help goals turn into habits.

Signing Savvy is proudly Deaf owned, CODA owned, Woman owned, and Educator owned, and our mission has always been to support learners with accurate, accessible ASL resources.

One Goal, One Sign at a Time

This year does not have to be about doing everything. It can simply be about doing something consistently and intentionally.

One goal. One sign at a time. 🤟

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