What is Online Learning?
History
In tracing the roots
of online learning, it is first necessary to put forth a basic understanding of
what sets online learning apart from other forms of learning. For the purpose
of this article, online learning is learning that takes place via the Internet
when there is a lack of physical presence between the learner and instructor
due to geographic separation. Given this perspective, evidence of learning
at-a-distance is seen in a 1728 advertisement for a Boston mail-based
correspondence course for
learning shorthand. Recognized formal education
at-a-distance can be found as early as 1858 at the University of London and in 1873 through the Society to Encourage Studies at Home in Boston. Early forms of
technology-enhanced distance learning are found in the early 1900s with the use
of new technologies such as the radio, slide projector, and motion picture.
Starting in the 1940s, television provided another medium for distance
learning. The first noted use of computers that formed an organized and
connected system of learning was PLATO (Programmed Logic for Automatic Teaching Operations) in 1960 at the
University of Illinois. With the conception of the World Wide Web in 1989
by Tim Berners-Lee and it being made publicly available in 1993, modern forms
of online education began developing.Current Practice
Today’s online learning occurs through the use of digital
devices such as personal computers, laptops, tablets, or mobile phones that are
connected to educational content, events, and activities via the Internet.
Depending upon personal choices, needs, and resource availability, web-based
learning is available in a variety of formats from instructor-led massive open
online courses (MOOCs) to self-paced
personalized web-based tutorials. Online learning usually involves gaining
access to rich learning environments, experiences, and events which might
otherwise not be possible in a typical classroom.
At the level of primary grades, online learning is usually
limited to teacher-led activities in the classroom or parent-monitored
web-based activities at home. At the secondary level, online learning options
become more varied and with increased individual access. For higher education
and adult education, learners typically have open access to a variety of
digital technologies which allow full access and use of web-based learning
resources.
Today the term online learning is often incorrectly used
interchangeably with e-learning. In actuality online learning is a subset of
e-learning, which actually encompasses all forms of teaching and learning
through the use of educational technologies whether via the Internet, a
network, or a standalone system. This broad expanse of e-learning includes
multimedia learning, computer-based training (CBT), virtual learning environments, and mobile learning.
Final Words
In summary, online learning involves achieving intended
learning outcomes using a digital device that has access to web-based
educational content, resources, events, and activities.
Reflection Point - “Education is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting
of a fire.” ~W. B. Yeats