TL;DR: As of March 29, you can get The All-in-One American Sign Language Bundle for just $17.50 with the code LEARNNOW. It's usually $618, so you're saving a whopping 97%.
If learning a new language is on your bucket list, this deal on the All-in-One American Sign Language Bundle is definitely worth consideration, as learning ASL has a lot of benefits. And just like any other language, it has a ton of nuances. So, your best bet for becoming proficient in it is to take a course — and this one is practically a steal.
The All-in-One American Sign Language Bundle includes 590 lessons taught by training specialists at Intellezy Learning and Michael Honkanen of Able Lingo. And as part of our Best of Digital sale, it’ll only cost you $17.50 with the code LEARNNOW, making it about $1.35 per course (reg. $618).
Course difficulty ranges from total beginner-level basics to signing an entire narrative with ASL. With lifetime, anywhere access, you can begin with whatever course suits your experience level. If you’re new to it, kick things off by learning the alphabet, finger-spelling, numbers, sentence structure, telling time, feelings, professions, nouns, verbs, and facial expressions. You’ll also get a brief overview of the history and origin of deaf education and oralism.
Once you’ve built a foundation, you can dive deeper into each topic. Want to learn how to answer questions with depth? There’s a course on emotional signing and responding. Want to be able to sign without looking robotic? There’s a course dedicated to injecting personality into ASL. And when you’re feeling really ambitious, there’s a course that teaches you to sign an interesting narrative full of useful vocabulary you already picked up from the other courses. It’s like the grand finale.
Like learning any other language, ASL requires lots of practice to reach fluency. That’s why you’ll get lifetime access for mobile and desktop with this deal.
Save 97% and start your lessons ASAP — just remember to use the code LEARNNOW at checkout.
Prices subject to change.
via Zero Tech Blog