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PLATO - PLATO's birth |  | PLATO - PLATO's birth: Encyclopedia II - PLATO - PLATO's birth |  | Chalmers Sherwin, a physicist at the University of Illinois, suggested a computerized learning system to William Everett, Dean of the College of Engineering. Everett recommended that Daniel Alpert, another physicist, convene a meeting on the topic that included engineers, educators, mathematicians, and psychologists. After several weeks of meetings the group was unable to suggest a single design for such a system. Alpert was unhappy with the results, but before announcing their failure he mentioned the meetings to a lab assistant, Donald Bitzer. Bitzer claimed that he had already been thinking about the problem, and suggested that ...
See also:PLATO, PLATO - Background, PLATO - PLATO's birth, PLATO - NSF involvement, PLATO - The CDC years, PLATO - PLATO in South Africa, PLATO - The PLATO Online Community, PLATO - Testing, PLATO - Other versions, PLATO - Innovation |  | | PLATO, PLATO - Background, PLATO - Innovation, PLATO - NSF involvement, PLATO - Other versions, PLATO - PLATO in South Africa, PLATO - PLATO's birth, PLATO - Testing, PLATO - The CDC years, PLATO - The PLATO Online Community |  | |
|  |  | PLATO: Encyclopedia II - PLATO - PLATO's birth
PLATO - PLATO's birth
Chalmers Sherwin, a physicist at the University of Illinois, suggested a computerized learning system to William Everett, Dean of the College of Engineering. Everett recommended that Daniel Alpert, another physicist, convene a meeting on the topic that included engineers, educators, mathematicians, and psychologists. After several weeks of meetings the group was unable to suggest a single design for such a system. Alpert was unhappy with the results, but before announcing their failure he mentioned the meetings to a lab assistant, Donald Bitzer. Bitzer claimed that he had already been thinking about the problem, and suggested that he could build a demonstration system.
Donald Bitzer, regarded as the "father of PLATO", succeeded largely due to his rejection of "modern" educational thinking. Returning to a basic drill-based system, his team improved on existing systems by allowing students to bypass lessons they already understood. Their first system, PLATO I first ran on the locally-built ILLIAC I computer in 1960. It included a TV for display and a special keyboard to navigate the system's menus. In 1961 they introduced PLATO II, which ran two users at once.
Convinced of the value of the project, the PLATO system entered a major redesign between 1963 and 1966. The new PLATO III allowed "anyone" to design new lesson modules using their TUTOR programming language, brainchild of Paul Tenczar. Built on a CDC 1604 which had been given to them for free by William Norris, PLATO III could run up to 20 lessons at once, and was used by a number of local facilities in Urbana-Champaign that could be attached to the system with their custom terminals.
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 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "PLATO's birth", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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