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Showing posts with label K-12. Show all posts
Showing posts with label K-12. Show all posts

Thursday, May 3, 2018

GIS Education Weekly: Landscape Architecture Students Sue CSU

On and Off Campus

Georgia State: Prevent Child Abuse Georgia Creates Online Resources Map For Families - Prevent Child Abuse Georgia (PCA Georgia) developed a map of 3,000 resources.

Grand Haven Tribune: Mapping out the city - "After learning about mapping, Grand Haven Christian School sixth-graders mapped out street signs and fire hydrants for the City of Grand Haven."

Thursday, September 14, 2017

GIS Education Weekly: Why Female Students Leave STEM

Articles
Concentration of Children Near Facilities
Releasing Cancer Causing Chemicals

DePaul Geography undergraduate student Michael Rasmussen made the school's Map of the Month

Bulldog Blog (University of Redlands): Environmental business alumnus helms GIS department within days of graduating - Jakob Larson ’17 was hired to manage GIS operations for California’s largest land preservation system, the Wildlands Conservancy.

UW-Green Bay: More than 200 UW-Green Bay students navigating with GPS - It's about the school's Gateways to Phoenix Success (GPS) program for first year students.

Monday, February 22, 2016

"GIS Gang" Leader Shares Best Practices

In September 2015 Wendy Lemke, a sixth grade teacher at Ann Arbor's St. Francis of Assisi Catholic School, launched a before school club, the GIS Gang. I shared an edited version of her blogs posts about the club's meetings last week.

This Q & A focuses on the lessons learned and offers advice that other educators working with GIS in K-12 students may find valuable. Thanks for taking the time to share Wendy!

1) If you were giving advice to other schools, would you suggest GIS be used in class or in in extra-curricular club? Why?
In my experience, GIS in education consists of two parts: data analysis and map creation. So, there is a place for GIS in both arenas.

I believe that analyzing map data is an excellent and integral part of teaching science and social studies. In addition, simple map building (pinning locations with information and images) can be used in the same way that PowerPoints are used in class. . . a creative way for students to present information. A middle school classroom is a great venue for the Explorer map analysis and map creation lessons.

Monday, February 15, 2016

Lemke's GIS Gang: Ann Arbor Middle Schoolers Tackle GIS Before School

Introduction

Wendy Lemke is a 6th grade teacher at St. Francis of Assisi Catholic School in Ann Arbor, Michigan. She’s part of the GIS Resources and Applications for Career Education Project (GRACEGRACE Project ArcGIS Online homepage). The National Science Foundation funded effort aims to expand and disseminate technology-based education for STEM careers in K-12 and the workplace. In 2015 Lemke and other participants attended a one week summer institute and a hybrid (online and face-to-face) 30 hour professional development program focusing on ArcGIS Online.

In September 2015 Lemke launched a before school club, the GIS Gang, for interested six through eight graders. She thoughtfully blogged about the group’s ten weekly meetings. With her permission, I’ve condensed her posts into a shortened “diary” that illustrates some of the excitement and inevitable ups and downs she faced. I encourage interested readers to dive into her unedited posts on GeoNet for “the rest of the story.” Next week I'll follow up with a Q&A on what she learned and suggestions for the other educators.

Sunday, November 11, 2012

NEARC Educators Day 2012: Successes but Challenges Ahead

Tora Johnson, speaking, and Lyn Malone
open the conference.
The fifth annual NEARC GIS Educators Day was held in conjunction with the fifth annual Conference of GIS Educators from Maine on Sunday, November 11. The venue was the Camden Opera House.

I spoke first in an early paper session and addressed the use of authentic learning to better engage students. I introduced four teachable moments (AFL Players Map, Satellite Sentinel/Enough project images from Khartoum bombing in Oct, bad geocoding, Apple’s use of OpenStreetMap) and had the attendees brainstorm about which standards/learning objectives, skills might be taught from this story, situation or event. (Resources mentioned in that talk)

Robb Freeman, Eastern Maine Community College shared his first foray into service learning. His school serves mostly working students and after a first class in GIS prompted interest from a group of excited students, he looked for a second course. As luck would have it, a state grant, The Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research, (EPSCoR) aimed at service learning related to sustainability fell into his lap. He first looked for a local partner. The three organizations he approached with his student labor all said yes! He decided to work with the Frenchman Bay Partnership and focus on their eel grass loss issue. Eel grass is important ... He started his four students off with six weeks or so of lab work in preparation for their work on data collection and mapping of the current state of eelgrass and the development of a detailed atlas of the Bay.

There were some successes:
  • student fun/learning 
  • learned of a 66% net loss of eelgrass between 1996-2008
  • build a new eelgrass data layer for 2011 
  • developed a few atlas maps
  • students offered a poster for last years conference (and won the competition!)
The biggest disappointment for Freeman was that the students did make as much progress as he would have hoped. In the end, students from the College of the Atlantic joined the class in their project. Among the things Freeman would change in a future implementation:
  • set more realistic expectations
  • make clear promises to the client
  • use less class time and get students into the field sooner
  • give students freedom to learn “how to” - but not too much
  • let the client determine the project goals
  • lead by example - by illustrating how service learning (doing real work) can be fun and rewarding
Spatial Thinking Panel
A panel on spatial thinking was far reaching and involved as many people from the audience as panelists. While we didn’t define spatial thinking, we did agree that students entering college are not prepared in term of spatial thinking and basic geography (lat/long, etc.) We touched on critical thinking skills, problem definition skills, and the possibility of teaching spatial thinking without GIS. We addressed questions from a faculty member at Fitchburg State (MA) about getting students interested in GIS. We also tried to address the challenge of students who want to learn to push buttons vs. really understand the underlying process/logic.

Matthew Bampton of the University of Southern Maine took a swerving path from FloatingSheep.org maps, to Waldo Tobler, to Wicked Problems (see the definition) to get to his work taking undergraduates into the field to see what they could do. He spoke of two projects, one covering many years to explore the islands off the main coast to better understand the underlying geological processes, and a second looking at the impact of historical climate change in the Shetland Islands. The projects all sounded very involved and included carrying and using a variety of surveying tools including total stations and terrestrial LiDAR. Bamptons response to a question regarding challenges lead him to address “what works.” Among his observations:
  • mix of men and women on field teams
  • students physically well-trained for the environment are likely to be especially successful in problem solving/creative thinking in the field
  • formal old school rules (no drinking, no smoking, no foul language, be polite, etc.)
  • selection of students just by grades did not work; better to see a full skill set
  • better to build skilled teams
  • students from small liberal arts schools tend to fair well in the field
A panel addressed the New Hampshire Esri K-12 site license (I wrote about it in August), which was fully funded and running this fall. The four players behind it were New Hampshire Cooperative Extension, New Hampshire Fish and Game, the University of New Hampshire Dept of Education and the state Geographic Alliance.

The final panel of the day was titled What Do Employers Want? The 21st Century Geospatial Workforce. It featured actual hiring managers from real Maine GIS using companies and organizations.

Judy Colby-George founded Spatial Alternatives, a small consulting company in Yarmouth, with a special interest in participatory GIS. She made these comments about potential hires:
  • she’s looking for a person who can ask the right question at the right time
  • she worries less about GIS skills, because employees follow the company workflow
  • she’s looking for students who understand the principles of GIS and who are willing to do whatever is needed (from sweeping floors to digitizing to analysis)
On the future of hiring she noted that what happens in local town budget impacts how she’ll hire. She fears future budgets may force smaller firms to close.

She shared this advice for students:
  • do group projects (that’s what real life is like)
  • best class she took had groups do same project using different software and highlight what the package did well/poorly
  • get around human resource by tracking down hiring manager
She had this advice for instructors:

Consider having students get their own project data (or give them ugly data), since again, that’s the real world.

Patrick Cunningham, is the CEO of Blue Marble Geographics based in Gardiner, ME. The software development shop has about 25 people and recently acquired World Mapper.

On hiring he noted:
  • we want to hire folks from Maine
  • people who show a skill for learning
  • GIS degree not required
  • however, a college degree is
  • applicants should have some experience (at least internship or volunteer work)
  • software developers need lots of math and heavy programming
In the near term he expects to hire a marketing person (the company has never had one before) and a sales support staffer.

His advice to applicants: Write clearly on resume and cover/intro letter. It matters!

Nate Kane works at the Maine Department of Transportation, the state’s transportation agency.

His agency is looking for:
  • people who can innovate, think for themselves
  • not necessarily specific software for a specific time but rather those who get the “how”
  • someone who can persevere and try something new
  • those who work well with others (something you can’t teach)
In the future staffers will be more involved with gaining access to and using contributed (geoaware) data. That means means collaboration and fusing of data. He also sees more roles for staffer to present what has been done or learned to a variety of agency clients.

Kane recalled the most valuable course he took (from Mathew Bampton): urban physical geography. It involved a team project, finding resources and communicating results. He reminded students that state service applications may seems intimidating - but it’s worth filling out all the forms and not leaving anything out.

Stu Rich of PenBay Solutions based in Brunswick described the company as a software development shop focusing on Web based presentation of facilities data. They have two kinds of staffers:
  • CAD/GIS analysts - who manage, enhance, correct QA/QC the data people
  • software developers - who build the software (human interaction) with stable data 
The former need data experience (data manipulation, QA/QC, etc.), AutoCAD and ArcGIS knowledge, but no need for open source experience. He explained how his clients use proprietary software exclusively: Esri, Autodesk, Oracle, etc.

The latter need not have specific experience with a language or development environment.

Rich described the move from the desktop to the Cloud, but reminds educators and applicants that apps like ArcGIS Online are young. Still, he argues, this is the direction in which the industry is going.

Friday, October 28, 2011

Measuring the Value of the Traveling Giant Map

There are a million articles like this one from the Natchitoches, LA paper about large floor maps visiting schools and stocking-footed kids tromping across them. I recall one of the U.S. that visited my elementary school back in the 1970s. The most memorable part for me? Sliding around it in our socks!

Clearly, students enjoy the activity, that is, the "being active" aspect of the map's visit. In Natchitoches, it was the map of the Pacific Ocean that came to town. It's the newest of National Geographic's traveling giant maps. (The map was announced via a press release on Oct 26. I was interested to see that funding for the map and educational materials was from Oracle!)
"They love it," said Paul Nagel, an associate professor at NSU who helped secure the map through his role with the Louisiana Geography Education Alliance.
"It's an interactive way to learn geography. It allows the kids to be up and moving and learning in a new way," he said.
While I think back on such visits fondly, is there any research as to the educational benefit of the visit?  Of which kinds of activities are best done with a giant map vs. a wall map vs. a paper map? Of how many "classes" with the map is optimal to teach key principles? The Q & A section of the National Geographic site on the traveling maps discusses that activities and materials to do them are delivered with the map, but there's no detail on what topics are covered for which maps or how they map to educational standards.

I think it's fair to ask the same questions about the value and use of U.S. or world maps painting on the blacktop at a school or youth center.

That said, I love that these maps are still so popular because they:
  • are low tech
  • physically convey the friction of distance
  • explode the notion that maps are only on the wall or on the computer
  • allow group activities often limited by a small desktop map or computer screen
  • enhance student interactivity
  • get students out of the classroom