Ohm's Law tells us about the current conductivity of a substance or RESISTIVITY (p).
The resistivity of a substance is given by the amount of electric field that is needed to make a certain current per area flow through a conductor. Each material has a specific resistivity that you can look up. NOW this we can use to talk about the resistance (R) of a substance.
R = pl/A
Where p = resistivity (a constant for a particular material) [in Ohm metres, Ωm]
l = length of the material [in metres, m]
A = cross-sectional area of material [in metres sqaured, m2]
Thus we can also state Ohm's Law as
R= V/I
R = resistance [in Ohms, Ω]
V = electric potential difference between the ends of the conductor [in Volts, V]
I = current through the conductor [in amps, A]
This form of Ohm's law refers only to the actual piece of material, not to the general metal or whatever. It is the one most used and is fundamental in all electrical calculations.
Some conductors are Ohmic conductors and if you drew a V versus I graph it would be a straight line and the gradient would equal resistance. However, there are many non-ohmic conductors eg light globes (because temperature affects resistivity, p), semi-conductors and super-conductors.
That was not a simple explanation for Ohm's Law but I hope it made sense. Ohm's Law is THE most important equation you can know in electrical interactions.