Definition
One of the three domains of learning, the cognitive domain covers mental skills and the acquisition of knowledge — remembering facts, understanding concepts, applying rules, analyzing situations, evaluating options, and creating new ideas. In pilot training, it is the 'thinking and knowing' side of learning, as distinct from physical skills (psychomotor domain) and attitudes or values (affective domain).
Plain English
The thinking and knowledge part of learning. It covers what a student knows, understands, and can reason about — facts, rules, procedures, and how to use them.
Context Anchor
Seen in instructor training when a syllabus explains what kind of learning a lesson is meant to build.
Derivation
From Latin cognoscere, 'to come to know.' The word 'cognitive' refers to mental knowing — thinking, reasoning, and understanding — which is exactly what this domain of learning covers.
Why Pilots Care
Flight instructors must develop this domain so pilots can understand aerodynamics, regulations, and weather well enough to make safe decisions.
Grounding Statement
When a student explains why a go-around is the safer choice instead of just moving the controls, that is learning in the cognitive domain.
Intuition Check
Do not read “domain” as a website address or a physical place. Here it means a category or area of learning. Do not read “cognitive” as just “being smart.” Here it means the mental side of learning: knowing, understanding, and deciding.
Example Sentence 1
Reading and understanding the regulations on minimum fuel reserves is learning in the cognitive domain.
Example Sentence 2
Review questions help the instructor check whether the cognitive domain of learning has taken hold so the student can explain why a particular procedure is required.