Post on 25-Feb-2016
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Toffler’s Third Wave and Six Strands of Society Timeline
Deidre BuckhalterWalden University
EDUC 7100
Agricultural Era•8000 B.C. – 1750 A.D.
Industrial Era•1750 A.D. - 1955
Information Era•1955 - Present
The 4th Wave•2015-?
The Waves of Technology
o Most humans lived in small, often migratory groups and fed themselves by foraging, hunting, fishing, or herding(1980).
o People were dependent on the land and the seasons of the agricultural world (2008).
8000 B.C. – 1750 A.D.Agricultural Era
o Reformed life globallyo Families were separated to work in towns
and factories (2008).o Extended family living together were no
longer common. The family structure consisted of father, mother, and children.
o Mass production and factories were common.
Industrial Era1750 A.D. - 1955
o Most people live outside the nuclear family model (1980).
o Flexible hours, casual Fridays, and working from home are all examples of the shifts that occurred in the world of work (2008).
o Communication is increased through usage of internet, wireless phones, and internet.
Information Era 1955 - Present
o I predict the 4th wave, biotechnology to begin in 2015.
o Biotechnology will create a growth in science and medicine globally.
o Biotechnology will create a division between society based on morals.
The 4th Wave 2015-?
Three Waves of Technology Key technological advances and innovations The Nature of Work Educational theories of learning and instruction Nature of Society and Culture Political
Timeline of Six Strands of Society (1900-present)
1900-1910
1900 1905 1909
1900 - Fessenden transmitted the first radio broadcast from Brant Rock Station, MA.
1903 – The Wright Brothers invented the first powered airplane.
1908 - James Sprangler invented the electric vacuum cleaner
1900 – Telephone transmission extends across and between major cities
1905- Albert Einstein introduces his special theory of relativity
1904-Mary McLeod Bethune founds the Daytona Educational and Industrial Training School
1907- Maria Montessori founded the first Casa dei Bambini, “Children’s House”
1900 – Progressive Era
Production Era
1903 – US acquires Panama Canal 1908- FBI is e
stablished
1750 A.D.- 1955 Industrial Era
1910-1919
1910 1915 1919
1913- Irving Langmuir invented the Incandescent Electric Lamp
In 1913, Edwin Armstrong invented the regenerative circuit.
1913- Electricity is brought to Los Angeles
1913- New method of oil refining is introduced
1913- Edward Thorndike publishes book, Educational Psychology: The Psychology of Learning
1910 – Ragtime Era 1914- World W
ar I Era
1913- Woodrow Wilson is inaugurated 28
th president
1919- Treaty of Versailles is signed
Industrial Era
1920-1929
1920 1925 1929
1925 - John Logie Baird invented the television.
1928- The first transatlantic transmission
1921 – First major aerial dusting of crops
1927 – First refrigerator to mass produced with completly sealed refrigerating system
1924- Gestalt Theory
1929- Jean Piaget pblishes The Child’s Conception of the World
1920- Roaring Twenties
19th Amendment
1921- Warren Harding is elected president
1923- Teapot Dome
Industrial Era
1930-1939
1931 1935 1939
1937 – Grote Reber invented the radio telescope.
1938- Chestor Carlson invented the photocopying process.
1939 – Igor Sikorsky invented the helicopter.
1939 – John Atanasoff invented the Atansoff-Berry Computer
1933- Congress establishes Tennessee Valley Authority
1935- The first generator at Hoover Dam begins operation
1933- Ralph Tyler – Eight Year Study
1934 – William Bagley writes Education and Emergent Man
1932- The Great Depression
1933- The New Deal, Franklin Roosevelt
1931- Star Spangled is adopted as national anthem
1935- Social Security Act
Industrial Era
1940-1949
1940 1945 1949
1944 – Howard Aiken invented the Mark 1 Computer.
1945- Microwave oven was invented by Percy Spencer
1946- John Mauchly and J. Eckert invented the ENIAC Computer
1947- The first commercial oil well out of sight of land
1943- First commercially viable mechanical spindle cotton picker
1944 – GI Bill is signed by FDR
1949 – Ralph Tyler publishes Basic Principles of Curriculum and Instruction
1941- Japan surprise attack on Pearl Harbor
1945 – United Nations
1947- CIA established
President Succession Act
Industrial Era
1950-1959
1950 1955 1959
1951 – Jay Forrester invented Random Access Memory
1952 – Grace Hopper invented the first computer complier
1958 – Jack Kilby and Robert Noyce invented the Integrated Circuits
1955- Tarco, Idao becomes the first to have all electrical needs generated by a nuclear power plant
1959- The first large geothermal electricity=genrating plant opens in New Zealand
1953- B.F. Skinner’s Science and Human Behavior
is published.
1956- Benjamin Bloom – Taxonomy of Educational Objectives
1955- Bus Boycott in Montgomery, AL
1948-1960Post War Period
1950-1953- Korean War
1959- Alaska becomes the 49
th state
Industrial Era 1750 A.D. - 1955 Information Era 1955- present
1960-1969
1960 1965 19691966 – Jack Kilby, J. VanTassel & J. Merryman invented the Hand-held Calculator
1968- Douglas Engelbart invented the Computer Mouse
Robeert Dennard invented the Dynamic Random Access Memory
Ted Hoff invented the microprocessor
1965- The first electronic central office switching system
1969- Zero Power Physics Reactor goes operational
1962 – Vtgotsky’s Social Development Theory
1961- Jerome Bruner publishes The Process of Education
Civil Rights Movement 1954-1965
1968- Assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.1963- Martin Lu
ther King, Jr. delivers “I Have a Dream Speech”
President John F. Kennedy is assassinated
Information Era
1970-1979
1970 1975 1979
1972- Ralph Baer invented the Magnavox Odyssey (first home video game console)
1973 – Vinton Cerf invented the Internet.
Robert Metcalfe invented Ethernet
1976 – Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak invented the Personal Computer
1977- Dennis Hayes and Dale Heatherington invented the PC Modem
1974- Energy Reorganiztion Act of 1974
1978- Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act
1970- Jean Piaget, The Science of Education is published.
Learning Cycle Model
Criterion Referenced Instruction, Robert
Mager
1972 - Watergate
1973- Roe vs. Wade
1971- 26th
Amendment
1977- Jimmy Carter is inaugurated as the 39
th president
Information Era
1980-1989
1980 1985 1989
1983 – Richard Frenkiel and Joel Engel invented the Mobile Phone
1985- Windows program was invented by Microsoft
1980s –Introduction of the open-graded friction course NSFNET contract is
awarded to the team of IBM and MCI
1982- Madeline Hunter’s Direct Teaching Model
1983- MD Merrill,
Comoponent Display Theory
1981-1989Ronald Reagan president
1982 - Recession 1986 – Space Shuttle Challenger explodes
1989- George Bush is elected as president
Information Era
1990-1999
1990 1995 1999
1991- Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web
1999- Sergey Brin and Larry Page invented Google
1994- Farmers begin using Global Positioning System
1996- UV Waterworks
1993 - Jacqueline and Martin Brooks, n Search of Understanding : The Case for Constructivist Classrooms- The Constructivist Theory
1990 – Rapid Prototyping instructional design
1990-1991- Gulf War
1994- NAFTA
1998- House of Representatives impeach President Bill Clinton
1990- Iraqi troops invade Kuwait
Information Era
2000- 2009
20052000 2009
2001- Tony Fadell invented the IPOD
2007- H.G. Well invented the IPhone
2000- World record reliability benchmarks
2000- 100,000,000 cellular phone subscribers
2000 – Learning Object Design and Sequencing Theory, David Wiley II
2002- Jeroen J.G.
Merrienboer 4C/ID Model
2008- Barack Obama is elected president
2011+ 9/11 attacks 2007- Nancy Pelosi
becomes the first woman Speaker of the House of Representatives
2005- Hurricane Katrina causes a state of emergency in MS and LA
Information Era 1955- present
Dede, C.(2008). “Evolution of Educational Technology in Society, Education, and the Workplace. The Next Wave Part 2 Featuring Dr. Chris Dede.” Walden University.Laureate Education, Inc.
Thornburg, D.(2008). “Evolution of Educational Technology in Society, Education, and the Workplace. The Next Wave Part 1 Featuring Dr. David Thornburg.” Walden University. Laureate Education, Inc.
Toffler, A. (1980). The Third Wave. New York. Bantam Books.
References