Learning Experience Design Timeline

Implications and Impact Infographic

The design below was human-created using a Canva template by user Maddy Lyons. This link will take you to the full infographic with screen-reader capabilities on Canva.

Timeline of Learning Experience Design

20th Century  - Early theories from Thorndike and Skinner on behaviorism shaped beliefs about learning through stimulus-response. These ideas evolved into cognitivism, which focused on mental processes, and later to constructivism, emphasizing that learners actively build knowledge through  experience and social interaction.

1980s-1990s - Major technological leaps are made, such as the development of computers and the internet. This leads to more interactive media and informal learning through early online communities. The rise of Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) and collaborative tools like wikis and shared documents accelerated the trajectory for LXD.  While these tools enabled collaboration, they were often built for corporate or academic use, leaving other communities out of the conversation.

Mid-2000s - Learning design moves from an instruction-based to experience-based as Niels Floor defines LXD. This new approach views the learning journey as a holistic experience, focusing on emotion, engagement, and usability, much like a product or service. This shift brings the learner’s perspective to the forefront of the design process.

Now - The evolution of Learning Experience Design from academic theory to a highly-paid profession is inextricably linked to capitalism. It is an industry built on the principles of efficiency where learning experience is seen as a valuable commodity. This allows for sophisticated, engaging, and personalized learning experience designs for those who can afford it. 

This reality, however, poses a critical question: If the best learning design is reserved for those with capital, what does that say about our commitment to universal, equitable education? The framework of LXD is rooted in human-centered design and has the potential to transform public education and non-profit sectors. The ultimate challenge for modern LXD is to bridge this gap and create powerful and accessible learning experiences for all communities.

The following design is an AI-created Timeline of Learning Experience Design in Venngage. I prompted the AI model to create an infographic based on information communicated in the human-created design.

AI-generated image of Learning Experience Design Timeline

Note: Venngage requires a membership to download images, so this was a screenshot taken from their website.

The human-created infographic provides a timeline of what led to the current moment in learning experience design, while the AI-generated version seems to lack narrative depth. I established foundational theories and technological shifts before introducing the complex topic of capitalism to show the evolution from one to other. In contrast, the AI-generated infographic feels disjointed and rushed, offering a vague mention of past theories but then abruptly jumps to its central point on capitalism. This structure, which prioritizes call to action over a cohesive story, gives the AI-generated infographic a bit of a nonsensical feel that gives away its artificial nature.

References

LXD. (n.d.). A timeline of learning experience design evolution.

Lyons, M. (n.d.). Student PSA Walk Through Template Infographic in Colorful Retro Style [Template]. Canva.

Shapers. (2024). The origin of learning experience design

Venngage, Inc. (2025, September 7). Venngage.

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