Lesson 16
The Internet and Education
The
internet “Net” is the largest and far-flung network system-of-all- system. The
internet is not really a network but a loosely organized collection of about
25,000 networks accessed by computers on the planet. It is astonishing to know
that no one owns the Internet and it has no central headquarters.
Everything
coordinated in the Internet through a standardized protocol (or set of rules
for exchanging data) called Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP).
To gain access to the Internet, the computer must be equipped with what is
called a Server which has special software (program) that uses Internet
protocol. Originally developed and still subsidized by the United States
government, the Internet connect not only commercial, industrial, scientific
establishments but all other sectors including education and its libraries,
campuses, and computer centers.
The vast
sea of information now in the Internet, including news and trivia, is an
overwhelming challenge to those who wish to navigate it. Every day, the Net
user-population and the available information continue to grow, and new ways
are continuously being developed to tour the Internet.
The most
attractive way to move around the Internet is called browsing. Using a program
called a browser, the user can use a mouse to point and click on screen icons
to surf the Internet, particularly the World Wide Web (the Web), an Internet’s
subset of text, images, and sounds are linked together to allow users to access
data or information needed.
Today,
even elementary school graders in progressive countries like the United States
are corresponding via e-mail with pen pals in all 50 states. They ask probing
questions like, “What is your state’s most serious problems”, or How much does
pizza cost in your state? This educational activity prodded by their schools
are paying dividends from increasing the pupil’s interest in Geography to a
greater understanding of how people live in large cities and other places in
the United States or the world.
As a
student, the internet and education for me, is indeed as what I experienced is
inseparable today. It is because considering the great positive impacts of
internet in my studies; I observed that most school requirements or activities
were made possible and easy by internet. Also the great attraction of the
Internet is that once the sign-up fees are paid, there are no extra charges.
Electronic mail, for example, is free regardless of the amount of use. In
contrast, individuals using the Internet on their own personal computers must
pay on-going monthly fees to whoever is their service provider.
The
synergy of internet and education is indeed, a great favor for us students and
also for teachers. Moreover, the future of the Internet seems limitless.
Already its complexity has spawned and continues to spawn Net sites including
new demand for services to business, industries, science, government, and even
homes. Many experts predict that the Internet is destined to become the
centerpiece of all online communications on the planet and in some future time
in the solar system using interplanetary satellite communication stations.
I can
continue to apply internet in education in the classroom it is because educational
software materials have also developed both in sophistication and appeal. There
is now a wider choice from rote arithmetic or grammar lessons to discovery and
innovation projects. But the real possibility today is connecting with the
world outside homes, classrooms, and Internet cafes. And today schools are
gearing up to take advantage of Internet access, where they can plug into the
Library of Congress, make virtual visits to famous museums in the world, write
to celebrities, and even send questions to heads of states.
No comments:
Post a Comment