Online Learning History: Difference between revisions
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[http://www.eric.ed.gov/ERICWebPortal/Home.portal?_nfpb=true&ERICExtSearch_SearchValue_0=ED412357&ERICExtSearch_SearchType_0=kw&_pageLabel=RecordDetails&objectId=0900000b8012429a&accno=ED412357 Foundations of Distance Education] |
Revision as of 14:32, 31 July 2006
Let's build up a complete history of key milestones in internet-based learning. Each event should be a heading that includes the date.
1960 - PLATO
PLATO (Programmed Logic for Automatic Teaching Operations) system developed at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The system remains in operation until the mid-1990s. Wikipedia background on PLATO.
1969 - Founding of the Internet
US DoD commissions ARPANET. Hobbes Timeline
1971 - Ivan Illich's Learning Webs
Ivan Illich describes a computer-based education network in his book Deschooling Society
1979 - USENET begins
US DoD commissions ARPANET. Hobbes Timeline
1982 - Computer Assisted Learning Center (CALC)
The Computer Assisted Learning Center (CALC) was founded in 1982 in Rindge, New Hampshire, as a small, offline computer-based, adult learning center. The center was based on the same premise as today: to provide affordable, quality instruction to individual learners through the use of computers. Origins of CALCampus
1994 (about) - Development of Nathan Bodington VLE begins
Development of Nathan Bodington VLE at Leeds University begins from the Bionet TLTP project [1]
1994 - Lotus Development Corporation acquires the Human Interest Group
The system evolves into the Lotus Learning Management System and Lotus Virtual Classroom, now owned by IBM.
1994/95 - CALCampus.com
CALCampus was the first to develop and implement the concept of a totally online-based school through which administration, real-time classroom instruction, and materials were provided, originating with the QuantumLink campus. This was a significant departure from earlier methods of distance education because no longer was the individual distance learner isolated from the teacher and from classmates. Origins of CALCampus
1995 - Mallard web-based course management system developed at the University of Illinois
1995/6 - WOLF / Learnwise
WOLF (Wolverhampton Online Learning Framework)[2] developed at Wolverhampton University's DELTA institute under the guidance of Stephen Molyneux. [3] This went on to be released commercially by Granada Learning as Learnwise [4]
1997 (about) - Pioneer developed by MEDC (University of Paisley)
Pioneer was an online learning environment developed initially for colleges in Scotland. Pioneer was web-based and featured:
online course materials (published by the lecturers themselves) integral email to allow communications between students and tutors forum tools chat tools timeatable
The main driver for Pioneer was Jackie Galbraith.
When MEDC was closed, the Pioneer development team moved to SCET in 1998 taking Pioneer with them when it became SCETPioneer.
SCETPioneer was used by Glasgow Colleges and a number of other colleges in Scotland.
SCET merged with the SCCC and became Learning and Teaching Scotland
1998 - Martin Dougiamas begins preliminary work on Moodle
This paper contains some early thoughts
August, 2002 - Moodle 1.0 is released
See Also
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer-assisted_language_learning CALI History in this