Learning objectives are one of the most important - and most misunderstood - parts of an online course. When written well, they motivate students, set clear expectations, and guide your entire course structure. When written poorly, they're just filler text nobody reads.

Here's how to write learning objectives that actually do their job.

What a learning objective actually is

A learning objective is a statement that describes what a student will be able to do by the end of a module or lesson - not what you'll teach them, but what they'll be capable of.

This distinction matters. "I will teach you about lighting" is a teaching intention. "You will be able to set up a three-point lighting rig for a professional interview setup" is a learning objective.

The most common mistake

Most course creators use vague verbs that can't be measured:

The problem: you can't observe or measure whether someone "understands" something. These words give students no sense of what they'll actually be able to do.

The fix: use action verbs

Replace vague verbs with concrete, observable action verbs. Here are the best ones for online courses:

๐Ÿ“Œ Rule of thumb: if you can't physically observe a student doing the thing in your objective, the verb is too vague.

Before and after examples

โŒ "Students will understand content marketing strategy."
โœ… "Students will be able to create a 90-day content calendar for their business, including channel selection and posting frequency."
โŒ "Students will know how to use Lightroom."
โœ… "Students will be able to edit a raw photo from start to finish using Lightroom's basic panel, colour grading tools, and export settings."
โŒ "Students will appreciate the importance of mindset."
โœ… "Students will be able to identify their top three limiting beliefs and apply a reframing technique to each one."

The formula

Every learning objective should follow this structure:

"By the end of this module, you will be able to [action verb] + [specific, measurable outcome]."

How many objectives per module?

Aim for 1โ€“3 learning objectives per module. Any more and the module is probably trying to cover too much. Each objective should map to at least one lesson in that module.

Let Framio write your objectives for you

Framio generates professionally written learning objectives for every module in your curriculum - instantly.

Build my curriculum โ†’

Writing good learning objectives takes practice. But once you get the hang of it, they'll become your most powerful tool for designing courses that actually get students results - which leads to better reviews, more referrals, and a stronger reputation as a creator.