If you're going to learn one opposition, I'd say a derivative is a specific instance or product of the process of derivation, but there are exceptions to this explanation, and the distinction often depends on the field/context in question. Derivative can also be an adjective, whereas derivation is always a noun.
** In general, I'd recommend learning derivative's most common noun and adjective meanings and only worry about derivation if it matters to you because of a specific context (e.g. if you're a mathematician or something). Derivative is the much more useful word, in my opinion. I can't think of a single time I've used derivation in my daily life, but derivative probably comes up once a month—I'd consider it an important word for an advanced learner.
Some complications for each, just to show how diverse they can be:
Derivation
(In gunnery) The deviation of a projectile from its normal course due to its form, motion, the resistance of the air, or wind; spec. the constant inclination of a projectile to the right due to the right-hand spin imparted by the rifling; drift.
(In medicine) The withdrawal of inflammation or morbid humour from a diseased part of the body, by blistering, cupping or other means.
Derivative (as a noun):
(In music) A chord derived from a fundamental chord, esp. by inversion.
(In medicine) A method or agent that produces derivation
And in math, they both have specific meanings:
http://people.math.harvard.edu/~elkies/M250.04/deriv.html