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Introduced mass instruction, rhetorical training, and analytical teaching methods. They treated education as a professional craft, created the foundation for instructional design.
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Created the first widely popular illustrated textbook for children. It linked visual imagery with language learning, anticipating modern multimedia education.
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Emphasized sensory experience and developmental stages. His method used real-world objects to teach number, form, and language—shifting focus to learner-centered instruction.
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Developed a structured, psychology-based instructional model. His four-step method (Clearness, Association, System, Method) influenced lesson planning and teacher training.
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The first school museum opened in St. Louis, distributing visual aids like stereographs and slides.
Marked the beginning of organized visual instruction in U.S. education. -
Psychologists like Gagné and Briggs developed training materials using principles from learning theory. Introduced systematic approaches to instruction, including task analysis and evaluation—laying the groundwork for instructional design.
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The U.S. military produced over 400 training films and 600 filmstrips. These media were credited with accelerating training and improving performance—an early example of large-scale instructional media success.
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The Federal Communications Commission set aside 242 channels for educational use. Sparked a boom in instructional television, backed by major funding from the Ford Foundation.
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Robert Glaser coined the term and emphasized measuring individual performance against defined objectives. Became a central feature of instructional design, especially in evaluating learner outcomes.
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Defined five domains of learning and nine events of instruction.vIntroduced hierarchical analysis, which became foundational in instructional design models.
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Designers began focusing on real-world problem solving, collaboration, and learner ownership.
Shifted attention from traditional training to electronic performance support systems and knowledge management. -
Internet access in U.S. schools jumped from 50% to 90% between 1995 and 1998.Distance learning and digital media use surged in higher education, business, and the military.