History Of Technology In The Classroom
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Education has gained a new dimension with the advent of technology. It has come a long way from the 1950s when TV was the primary audio-visual aid used in teaching. The Vocational Education Act passed in 1963 led to the influx of new money for supporting the use of technology in schools. However, the mainframe and minicomputers of the time used batch processing, which provided for minimal manual intervention. Interactive learning was still a far cry then. |
The Elementary and School Education Act of 1965 brought in more computers into schools, but they were used mostly for administrative purposes and student counseling. In the following years, the syllabus was expanded to include high level programming languages like Fortran and COBOL. Computer Maintenance became yet another vocational learning program. The personal computer entered the scene in the 1970s, and went on to influence classroom teaching in a big way in the years to come.
Digital media, the Internet and multimedia presentations dominate the mode of instruction today. Laptops and handheld devices empowered with wireless technology and the World Wide Web paved the way for a new era in classroom learning. There is a mind-boggling range of information at the click of a finger on almost any topic under the sun. Today, education has become an easily accessible goal, especially with the introduction of online degree programs. eLearning is the order of the day, and the conventional role of a teacher as the primary facilitator of learning and instruction in a classroom has been done away with.
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