Location:
ELI
Get the 2009 Horizon Report

ELI History

ELI History

The EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative (ELI) began as the National Learning Infrastructure Initiative, or NLII. The NLII started in 1994, at a time when most campuses had adopted IT for administrative purposes, but few viewed technology as central to a successful learning environment. NLII, then a part of Educom, sought to drive systemic change in higher education by identifying how technology could best support effective teaching and learning.

The NLII initially focused on creating a technology infrastructure to improve higher education access and quality while reducing costs. The Internet and all forms of electronic communication had a central role in this infrastructure, but NLII members understood that colleges and universities required more. In addition to new tools and standards, institutions needed principles, practices, and partnerships to ensure that the infrastructure appropriately supported high-quality, affordable education.

Recognizing that continuously anticipating and adjusting is the key to success, a strategic planning group met in August 2004 to anticipate and adjust the direction of the NLII for the next 10 years of its operation. The resulting strategic plan moves beyond infrastructure to a mission of advancing learning through IT innovation, with learners and successful learning as the strategic focus. This ensures that all of our efforts are directly related to the core academic mission of our members--learning. As part of this transition, the NLII became the EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative (ELI) to better reflect its emphasis on learning and the intelligent use of information technology to support it.

As teaching, learning, and technology advance, new issues and challenges arise that require ELI to adjust the topics it pursues. However, our archived pages serve as continuing resources for the ELI community after past topics have been retired.

ELI Milestones

2009

  • Malcolm Brown joins ELI as Director.
  • Veronica Diaz joins ELI as Associate Director.
  • ELI pilots a series of "Solutions in Action" webcasts that showcase community solutions to the Top Teaching and Learning Challenges, 2009.
  • Julie K. Little becomes EDUCAUSE Director of Teaching, Learning, and Professional Development.
  • Carie Page becomes the ELI program administrator.
  • ELI produces its first conference-wide alternate reality game at the ELI Annual Meeting. The meeting also features a Faculty Innovation Showcase in the Informal Learning Spaces and a ribbon bar for social tagging.

2008

  • ELI launches a community-wide project on the Challenges in Teaching and Learning
  • Membership grows to include more than 240 institutions and organizations
  • ELI conducts its first online spring focus session
  • ELI  launches the Future of Learning project
  • ELI Annual Meeting experiments with citizen journalism, community-building, and a student content showcase
  • Carie Page joins ELI as program coordinator
  • Jarret Cummings becomes special assistant to the president.
  • Julie K. Little assumes the role of ELI interim director.
  • ELI  Director and Vice President Diana Oblinger becomes president of EDUCAUSE.  

2007

  • ELI produces two video “newsreels” summarizing focus sessions
  • ELI focus session experiments with interactive theater and Web 2.0 community tools
  • ELI produces six new whitepapers, to include a series on authentic learning (view a listing of ELI white papers)
  • ELI deploys two new Discovery Tools focused on learning space design and blogging
  • ELI develops screencasts to introduce Discovery Tools
  • ELI develops first interactive CD-ROM for members
  • ELI implements a new membership structure, realizing 41 percent growth in six months
  • ELI Annual Meeting experiments with learning circles and informal learning spaces

2006

  • EDUCAUSE publishes its second e-book, Learning Spaces, edited by EDUCAUSE VP and ELI Director Diana Oblinger
  • ELI conducts its first Web Symposium, Education for Our Times: Expertise and Engagement
  • ELI produces a three-part white paper series on the net savvy of the Net Generation (view a listing of ELI white papers)
  • Paul Hagner resigns as ELI associate director to resume research and teaching
  • Julie Little joins ELI as associate director
  • ELI grows to over 150 member institutions and organizations
  • The first ELI Discovery Tools are created and made available to full ELI members as practical resources for advancing the development of teaching, learning, and technology on their campuses
  • ELI completes its first full year of the ELI Web Seminars series

2005

2004

2003

2002

  • A partnership between NLII and the American Association of Higher Education (AAHE) is initiated; work begins on virtual communities of practice and assessment
  • A formal affiliation is established with MERLOT
  • Three pilot virtual communities of practice (VCOPs) are created for e-portfolios, learning objects, and the new academy

2001

2000

  • NLII focus sessions are initiated
  • Paul Hagner, the first NLII Fellow, leads the NLII focus on faculty engagement

1999

  • Educom and CAUSE merge to form EDUCAUSE
  • Carole Barone assumes the leadership of the NLII

1997

1996

1995

1994

NLII Fellows Program

The NLII operated the Fellows Program from 2000 to 2004 as a way of engaging individual members of the community in research of particular interest to the organization and its members. Chosen from a competitive pool of applicants, NLII Fellows conducted specific research projects that expanded the NLII knowledge base. The fellows also contributed to the general planning and development of the NLII issues agenda.


 
© Copyright 1999-2009 EDUCAUSE