Cunningham presents at History of Education Society meeting

Doctoral student Paige Cunningham will speak at the annual meeting of the History of Education Society, an international organization that encourages teaching of and research in the history of education. The group’s 2015 meeting will be held November 5-8 in St. Louis. Cunningham will present her paper titled, “Learning from PLATO: Lessons in Online Community Building” on November 6.

Abstract: PLATO (Programmed Logic for Automatic Teaching Operations) is a computer-assisted instruction system, first developed at the University of Illinois in 1960. PLATO was originally a solitary experience in which individuals worked at their lessons on a terminal system, but did not interact electronically with other users. Users soon began to modify their computer-mediated reality, creating ways to talk to each other, leave each other messages, and even play games. A set of official communication tools were subsequently added which allowed users to communicate either directly or through message boards, while other users created their own social programs.

Though there are now many forms of electronic communication available beyond academic software, modern educational learning systems for both on-campus and distance education students have integrated communication tools. Current content/learning management systems have bulletin boards or forums, where class members can leave messages for the whole class. Students can send each other personal messages. Synchronous online classes let participants chat interactively with the whole class, a group, or a single other individual. Other, asynchronous, classes continue to follow the individualized, self-paced learning style that PLATO utilized, but also assume that students will want and use communications technologies. Traditional on-campus students have and use many of the same tools as distance education students, though they are physically in the same location as their instructors and peers and can speak directly to them. As the first students to use PLATO discovered, although online students rarely have the opportunity to interact face-to-face with their peers and instructors, through the use of official and unofficial online communication tools, they can be supported and made to feel just as included as the on-campus students, and may even be the ones to find new ways to create those connections themselves.

Cunningham is a third-year doctoral student whose research interests focus on how information technologies connect people who are spread out in space and time. She explores issues such as how social media and online learning systems connect geographically dispersed peoples, both for community building and educational purposes.

Updated on
Backto the news archive

Related News

iSchool researchers present at iConference 2024

The following iSchool faculty and students participated in the virtual portion of iConference 2024 from April 15-18. The in-person portion of the conference will be held in Changchun, China, from April 22-26. The theme of this year’s conference is "Wisdom, Well-being, Win-win."

Wegrzyn awarded SMART Scholarship

PhD student Emily Wegrzyn has been selected for the prestigious Science, Mathematics, and Research for Transformation (SMART) Scholarship-for-Service Program, which is funded by the Department of Defense. The primary aim of this program is to increase the number of civilian engineers and scientists in the U.S. 

 Emily Wegrzyn

Senior Spotlight: Colton Keiser

After graduating with his BSIS degree in May, Colton Keiser will head to St. Louis to work as an internal audit and financial advisory consultant with Protiviti. He gained experience in auditing while working as an intern for the Montgomery County Public Defender in his hometown of Hillsboro, Illinois.

Colton Keiser

Winning exhibit features recipes from across the globe

MSLIS students Yung-hui Chou, Alice Tierney-Fife, and Elizabeth Workman are the winners of this year’s Graduate Student Exhibit Contest, sponsored by the University of Illinois Library. Their exhibit, "Culture and Cuisine in Diaspora: A Hidden Library Collection," displays items from seven campus libraries and highlights research and recreational material centered on traditional recipes from across the globe. The exhibit is on display in the library's Marshall Gallery through the end of April and also available online.

MSLIS students Yung-hui Chou, Alice Tierney-Fife, and Elizabeth Workman stand next to the winning exhibit