Past present and future of online education infographic 480x460

A history of online education: Expanding the reach from correspondence to virtual learning spaces

  • You've got mail

    You've got mail
    The first informal correspondence courses were advertised in the Boston Gazette by Caleb Phillips (Ferrer, n.d.). Phillips promised that high-quality education could be delivered using weekly lessons sent through the mail (Siemens, Gasevic, & Dawson, 2015). These lessons were meant to teach shorthand (Erthal & Harting, 2005)
  • Special delivery

    Special delivery
    Correspondence course materials (Drexel University Online, 2017) are officially offered for the first time by The University of Chicago (Ferrer, n.d.). However, this was a very limited way to perform coursework, since formal communication was only one-way (Wolfe, 2014).
  • Tuning in

    Tuning in
    Since radios were becoming household items, Pennsylvania State University began broadcasting courses using this medium (Drexel University Online, 2017; Ferrer, n.d.). For nearly 20 years, over 200 educational radio stations were employed (Wolfe, 2014). While this type of correspondence reached a larger audience, the interaction between instructor and student still had major limitations (Siemens, Gasevic, & Dawson, 2015).
  • What's on the television?

    What's on the television?
    WOI-TV, a station created by Iowa State University, becomes the first practical educationally-owned television station (Ferrer, n.d.).
  • Educational TV takes off

    Educational TV takes off
    Other major institutions, namely The University of Houston, begin offering for-credit correspondence courses using educational television stations (Ferrer, n.d.; Drexel University Online, 2017). And, while the US had definitely dabbled in using radio and TV media for correspondence of education, the UK’s Open University really took advantage of these types of mass media (Craig, 2015).
  • Visions of a digital age

    Visions of a digital age
    J.C.R. Licklider of MIT is the first to come up with the idea that would eventually be known as the internet (Ferrer, n.d.).
  • Hello? It's your future calling.

    Hello? It's your future calling.
    The University of Wisconsin starts using telephone correspondence learning (Ferrer, n.d.; Drexel University Online, 2017). While this form of learning does help to foster some peer-interaction (whereas former modalities only offered student-instructor interaction), the number of students conversing with each other was small (Siemens, Gasevic, & Dawson, 2015).
  • A new age is born

    A new age is born
    The internet is born (Ferrer, n.d.; Drexel University Online, 2017)! ARPANET, created by ARPA (Advanced Research Projects Agency) is first developed by using a physical interface message processor (IMP) network (Ferrer, n.d.). The four institutions to use ARPANET are UCLA, UC-Santa Barbara, Stanford, and The University of Utah (Ferrer, n.d.). This is one of the biggest milestones in distance education (Siemens, Gasevic, & Dawson, 2015).
  • Telecommunications - The wave of the future?

    Telecommunications - The wave of the future?
    Coastline Community College is born as the first virtual campus (Dew, 2012). The college offers its degree programs solely through telecommuting, which incorporated various forms of mass media to deliver instruction (Ferrer, n.d.). These delivery methods included telephone, TV, radio, records, and tapes (Ferrer, n.d.).
  • Fully-online learning

    Fully-online learning
    The Western Behavioral Sciences Institute becomes the first school to offer a fully-online college program (Ferrer, n.d.). This is the beginning of online learning as we know it today (Drexel University Online, 2017; Dew, 2012).
  • A major turning point

    A major turning point
    Nova Southeastern University is the first school to offer an accredited online Graduate program (Ferrer, n.d.).
  • The world wide web is born!

    The world wide web is born!
    Tim Berners-Lee births the “World Wide Web” (Ferrer, n.d.; Drexel University Online, 2017).
  • Jones International University

    Jones International University
    Jones International University goes live (Ferrer, n.d.). This is the first fully-accredited, fully-virtual university (Ferrer, n.d.). However, the school shut down in 2015 (Ferrer, n.d.).
  • Online learning becomes a household term

    Online learning becomes a household term
    By this point in history, approximately 81% of all Colleges and Universities offer at least 1 online course (Drexel University Online, 2017).
  • The invention of the MOOC

    The invention of the MOOC
    Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) are first launched (Ferrer, n.d.). This spearheads a long list of Open Educational Resources (OERs) (Tuomi, 2013).
  • The University of Florida - Online

    The University of Florida - Online
    Approximately one-third of all higher education students are enrolled in at least one online course (Drexel University Online, 2017). Also, the University of Florida-Online goes live, becoming the first completely virtual public university (Ferrer, n.d.).
  • A virtual future

    A virtual future
    What does our future have to offer? With the inclusion of The Internet of Things (IoT), wearable technology (The New Media Consortium, 2017), and virtual reality (Drexel University Online, 2017), the possibilities are nearly limitless!