1. WINTER Template Evolution of Educational Technology Marife Garcia Paula Juliana Navarro Kreanne Pagdanganan II – 2 BECEd
2. The history of “Educational technology … can be traced back to the time when tribal priests systemized bodies of knowledge, and early cultures invented pictographs or sign writing to record and transmit information.” (Paul Saettler, 1990)
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33. WINTER Template REFERENCES “ EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY” by Dr. Paz I. Lucido & Dr. Milagros L. Borabo Duffy et. al book http://books.google.com.ph/books?id=rNDFZo4zHaMC&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false http://www.slideshare.net/fvsandoval/history-of-educational-technology http://www.myplick.com/view/1PsTtfSckr_/HISTORY-OF-EDUCATIONAL-TECHNOLOGY-TIMELINE http://www.slideshare.net/florencia7/history-of-education-technology-5319254 Thanks for Listening (^ - ^)Y
Notas do Editor
James Pillans, Headmaster of the Old High School of Edinburgh, Scotland From the mid to late 1800's, this old one room schoolhouse sits at Austin Manitoba. What intrigued me was the blackboard, original and made from boards
taken between 1900 and 1910 in an American School. As you can see, once again the desks are connected to each other and bolted to the floor. The walls are very sparce and the classroom lacks stimulation. There looks to be about 40 students of the same age in this class and only one teacher.
Mirroscope, a projector known as an episcope, and sometimes called a magic lantern. The mirroscope was made by the Buckeye Stereopticon Co., Cleveland, Ohio, USA. Four models were offered by Gamages Ltd (London) in 1913, at prices from 15 - 42 shillings.
AECT’s direct ancestor was formed in 1923 as the Department of Visual Instruction (DVI) of the National Education Association (NEA), and it remained a unit of the NEA, located within its Washington DC headquarters, for 48 years.
First large scale gen. Purpose digital electronic computer. Consisted of 18000 vacuum tubes & required the manual setting of switches to achive desirable results. Could perform 300 multiplications per second. By Presper Eckert Jr. And John Mauchly
When ITV launched on 22 September 1955, the BBC's television service had been running unchallenged for almost two decades and was fast gaining popularity. Less than fifteen months before the first television commercial appeared on British screens, on July 4th 1954, the Minister of Fuel and Power, Geoffrey Lloyd, burned a large replica of a ration book at an open meeting in his constituency to herald the official end of fourteen years of rationing in Britain. The dawning of a new age of prosperity was upon the British public. From a retailers point of view the start of commercial television could not have been better timed. At 8pm, on September 22, 1955, ITV broadcast its first television programme. Its first advertisement came 12 minutes later advertising Gibbs SR Toothpaste. That first programme is now almost completely forgotten. But the first advertisement has acquired iconic status