After reading the first third of 25 Years of Ed Tech (Weller, 2020), I was surprised that the web was relevant in education in 1995. Even more shocking was that HTML coding was also emerging at the time. In high school in 2006, I learned to write HTML in Communications Technology class using a web development tool called DreamWeaver. I was surprised when Weller mentioned that the web-publishing tool FrontPage was developed in 1996 and offered templates to build websites. Never mind that I thought DreamWeaver was an advanced digital tool in 2006; there were already tools like this ten years earlier. Weller (2020) states that “the uploading of publications to your own website marked the beginning of consideration about the dissemination of knowledge” (p. 18). This stood out to me because of the WebPress sites we use in the MALAT program to publish our academic blogs. The idea of using a digital platform to share your knowledge and learn from what others share feels like a newer concept for me as a student.

Although e-learning was relevant in education in 1999, it was defined differently then. Initially, the definition widely applied to any use of electronic media in education, but slowly the emphasis was on online delivery (Weller, 2020). Weller explains that most of the criticism of e-learning at he time was due to the belief that face-to-face learning was the only effective method of education. In addition, they stated, “the focus of such criticisms was often on the life of the academic and overlooked the social function of distance, open, and flexible learning options” (Weller, 2020, p. 44). E-learning is so valuable in today’s world due to its flexibility, and is why I can be a graduate student while continuing to work in my career.

References

Weller, M. (2020). 25 years of ed tech. Athabasca University Press. https://doi.org/10.15215/aupress/9781771993050.01