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Learning Objectives

Learning Objectives

Learning Objectives– Training programs should be designed by trainers and/or learners to achieve certain overall goals for the learner. Programs should also include various learning objectives that when reached culminate in the learner achieving the overall goals of the training program. Learners implement one or more learning strategies/methods/activities to reach learning objectives.

When designing a training plan, each objective should be designed and worded to the extent that others can clearly detect if the objective has been achieved or not. From reading the objective, readers should be able to answer the question: “What will the learner be able to do as a result of the learning activities/methods/strategies?”

As much as possible, objectives should also be written to be SMART (an acronym for specific, measurable, acceptable to you, realistic to achieve and time-bound with a deadline). Examples to Convey Nature of Well-Written Learning Objectives

To help learners understand how to design objectives, the following examples are offered to convey the nature of learning objectives. The examples are not meant to be offered as examples to be adopted word-for-word as learning objectives. Trainers and/or learners should design their own learning objectives to meet their overall training goals and to match their preferred strategies for learning.

Here are some examples for you to understand how to write learning objectives. The topic of the learning objective is included in bolding and italics. Learning objectives are numbered directly below.

Communication

Mentoring

Effective coaching

Cultural Diversity

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