image: Professor Ian Gass rehearsing for a Second level Geochemistry programme.
The Open University first broadcast on 3 January 1971 on BBC Two. The new university reached out to its first students through the innovative use of television and radio, and swiftly proved that it was possible to teach university level subjects to unqualified students at a distance. After a general introduction, the first programme was an introduction to mathematics.
Open University programmes were on at odd corners of the schedule, heralded by the animated OU logo and fanfare - the opening of Divertimento for Three Trumpetsand Three Trombones by Leonard Salzedo. Many people who were not OU students saw them, and the broadcasts gained a frequently parodied reputation for dated style and awkward presentation.
This was because there was insufficient money to update them unless the course itself was revised, and the presenters were academics rather than broadcasters. However, over 2 million people have benefitted from OU courses.
In 2006 the late night teaching ended, replaced by other teaching methods such as DVD and the internet. Today the Open University make programmes of general interest through a successful partnership with the BBC. Programmes such as The Money Programme and the award winning Coast are made to inspire an interest in lifelong learning in the viewer.
January anniversaries

The Six Wives of Henry VIII
1 January 1970
The Brains Trust
1 January 1941
The Archers
1 January 1951
Z Cars
2 January 1962
Trumpton
3 January 1967
Open University
3 January 1971
Camberwick Green
3 January 1966
Final edition of The Listener published
3 January 1991
Gardeners' World
5 January 1968
A Question of Sport
5 January 1970
Forces Programme
7 January 1940
Oranges Are Not The Only Fruit
10 January 1990
First in-vision television weather forecaster
11 January 1954
The League of Gentlemen
11 January 1999
Goodness Gracious Me
12 January 1998
Listen with Mother
16 January 1950
Life On Earth
16 January 1979
First episode of BBC Breakfast Time
17 January 1983
Blankety Blank
18 January 1979
The Week's Good Cause
24 January 1926
Under Milk Wood
25 January 1954
Television Dancing Club
27 January 1948
Desert Island Discs
29 January 1942
Newsnight
30 January 1980
The State Funeral of Sir Winston Churchill
30 January 1965
Alas Smith and Jones
31 January 1984


























