The learning outcome is the thing that the children produce in the lesson, while the learning objective is what you want the children to learn.
For example, the learning objective might be:
To be able to write descriptively,
while the learning outcome could be a story or diary entry etc.
I hope this makes sense!
2007-01-08 07:27:31
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answer #1
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answered by Funky Little Spacegirl 6
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The learning outcome is what knowledge you gained from an experience or observation.
learning objective is what you wish to learn, so you set yourself to the task of learning a particular thing.
2007-01-08 07:33:11
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Learning outcome is what actually occurs following the lesson. Learning objective is what was actually meant to occur following the lesson. The difference is what happens and what was meant to happen.
2007-01-08 07:27:50
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answer #3
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answered by Mick 2
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well the learning < seek the objective and then watch for the outcome...
2007-01-08 07:30:53
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answer #4
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answered by raybbies 5
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the only distinction between King James variations is between the 1611 version, which you probable won't have the means to verify until you're a pupil, and what's now many times observed simply by fact the authorized King James version, that's the 1789 version.
2016-10-30 08:50:06
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answer #5
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answered by nocera 4
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Hmm it sounds like you're doing a teaching qualification. Good luck - I learned diddly-squat on my PGCE course, and only learned anything at all about teaching once I started my job. I don't envy you all that rubbish about learning objectives and stuff. My tip: a good desired "learning" outcome is for the children to work in silence for an hour.
2007-01-08 08:11:36
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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As someone leaving school in 1938 at the age of 14 and feeling ignorant in every subject I knew about, without those I knew nothing about, I would say I had a very good education.
Nothing beats the thirst for learning and one of my teachers gave me that wonderful gift.
Learning turned my life from rags to riches.
2007-01-09 03:27:03
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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the objective is what you set out to teach the outcome is what actually is taught
2007-01-08 15:00:46
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answer #8
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answered by john s 1
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An objective is what you want to have.
An outcome is what you actually achieve.
Simple.
2007-01-08 07:38:02
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answer #9
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answered by efes_haze 5
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