Advertisement
Advertisement
Competence Concept. The meeting at the white office table
ATD Blog

Are Learning Objectives Dead?

Friday, April 14, 2023
Advertisement

Think back to a great training session you attended. What do you remember? If you’re like most of us, it’s memorable because the instructor was engaging, the content was relevant, and there was both practice and feedback. Even more important, you were able to take the learning back to your job and put it to use. Can you recall the learning objectives? Probably not. Let’s face it–learning objectives are not for the learner; they’re for the people building the training.

If you aren’t familiar with the term, a learning objective is an explanation of expected outcomes of the course. Learning objectives were originally divided into the cognitive domain and the psychomotor domain. Cognitive domain objectives are actions related to information or knowledge. For example, “Learner will recall the updated policy.” Psychomotor domain objectives are physical actions the learner will perform. For example, “Learner will arrange a display to match a given model.” Then there’s the difference between terminal and enabling objectives. And did we include our ABCDs: audience, behavior, condition, and degree? Learning objectives have an art and science all their own.

So what’s wrong with learning objectives? Technically nothing. It’s how L&D professionals use them that’s the issue.

Change happens so quickly in the workplace now that it’s easy for us to get lost in building learning objectives. By the time we’ve captured them all, they no longer apply. They don’t capture what our leaners will need to do after a learning experience. Dead learning objectives use vague words, lack relevance to students, and are difficult to measure on the job. For example:

Advertisement
  • Participant will understand changes to the process.
  • Learner will recall the reasons for the changes.
  • Learner will be more empathetic and caring.

In our session at ATD23, Are Learning Objectives Dead, we will refocus our efforts on a better use of our valuable time: creating performance objectives. Unlike a learning objective, a performance objective is something a learner will accomplish after the learning experience. Performance objectives can be measured, they help you build the right solution without a lot of fluff, and you can write and apply them quickly.

Want to learn how to create performance objectives? Join us on Sunday, May 21 at 3 p.m. Together we will transform ineffective learning objectives into useful performance objectives and learn how to design them better the first time.

About the Author

Rick At Lee is the learning design and content director for Truist Financial Corporation. He oversees Truist Learning's Design & Content COE, which is responsible for the design and management of all enterprise learning programs and serves as the Center of Expertise for learning teams across the organization. Rick earned a M.Ed. in Training and Development from North Carolina State University. When he isn't working, Rick enjoys running, camping, reading, and spending time with his family.

About the Author

Scott Weersing serves as Senior Impact Analyst at Truist Bank. Scott partners with stakeholders to show the value and impact of learning interventions on outcomes. He has worked with a variety of clients and industries, including manufacturing, healthcare, insurance, and call centers, to link training to business metrics. Scott has a BA in Political Science from UCLA and an MA in Educational Technology from Azusa Pacific University.

25 Comments
Sign In to Post a Comment
After two years of using Dr. Merrill's first principles, i believe i forgot all about learning objectives. The outcome we want is the learner be able to perform a task and to a specific degree based on the need. First principles of instruction does cover the subskills required to perform the main task . A good task analysis will show you all the skills and subskills required to perform a specific task. Also you may have your learning objectives all right ,the instruction strategy matters too.
Sorry! Something went wrong on our end. Please try again later.
This is still the favorite video I ever created. It will change your mind about learning objectives, based on scientific research. https://www.worklearning.com/2015/01/29/video-on-lobjs/
Sorry! Something went wrong on our end. Please try again later.
I have started making my objectives about the learner. Creating "I want" statements that they pick out are most valuable to them personally. For example "I want to discover ways to speed up my workflow with digital tools." When learners have a choice and it's all about them. The results are pretty amazing when it comes to buy-in.
Sorry! Something went wrong on our end. Please try again later.
Sorry! Something went wrong on our end. Please try again later.