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2006-07-09 14:20:21 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Teaching

5 answers

The instructional objective is the goal or outcome you will have wanted your students to learn at the end of the lesson. For example, an English grammar lesson may have the objective "Students will understand and demonstrate the correct usage of 'their, there, and they're' in formal writing." A successful lesson must have a clear objective.

2006-07-11 10:56:58 · answer #1 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Instructional Objectives are short-term goals that teachers make to provide meaningful learning experiences to students. They are stated using specific, measurable, and observable verbs (bloom's taxanomy) to progressively scaffold students from lower level thinking to higher order thinking. Without instructional objectives, teachers fail to attain effectiveness in their instruction. Teachers who do not plan their lessons well, hence lack proper instructional objectives, beat around the bush and miss the main point of the lessons they teach! What a waste of time, energy, and resources!

2006-07-09 14:31:53 · answer #2 · answered by Edward R 1 · 0 0

An instructional objective is a measurable way to chart progress on a skill you are trying to teach. It's usually a smaller unit of a goal on an IEP. You want the goal to be attainable within a year from the date of the IEP meeting.

2006-07-09 14:25:13 · answer #3 · answered by b_friskey 6 · 0 0

the goals the instructions are supposed to achieve.

The instructional objective of Grammar 101 is to give the student a basic understanding of the English Grammar.

2006-07-09 14:24:48 · answer #4 · answered by retard 2 · 0 0

These answers are pretty and all, but basically it is whatever you are about to teach.

2006-07-09 14:32:55 · answer #5 · answered by pikachuflatulates 5 · 0 0

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