All Points Blog
Our Opinion, Your Views of All Things Location

  • HOME

    About Us

    Advertising

    Contact Us

    Follow Us



    Feed  Twitter 

  • RECENT COMMENTS
  • NEWSLETTER

    All Points Blog

    Catching geospatial news that others miss. Delivered daily.

    Preview Newsletter | Archive

  • ARCHIVE
    << May 2012 >>
    S M T W T F S
       1 2 3 4 5
    6 7 8 9 10 11 12
    13 14 15 16 17 18 19
    20 21 22 23 24 25 26
    27 28 29 30 31    
  • PUBLICATIONS

Tagged: arkansas

Friday, March 30, 2012

 Harrisburg University student Steve Cline is using a balloon to capture imagery of a local island. The big issue in using these kits: helium shortage. Maybe it's time for kites!

- Penn Live

A new Kindle book (the authors refer to it as a manual) titled Gaining Competency With GIS: How-to Manual for ArcGIS Desktop Version 10 [Kindle Edition] offers help in gaining competency with ArcGIS. It references the ArcGIS 10 docs and I gather provides step by step instructions for tools and extensions. It claims to be based on the Geospatial Technology Competency Model (GTCM) but refers to the that document as "Geotechnical Competency Model" throughout. I wonder if that editing error is in part related to an English class cited in the acknowledgements.

via URISA Digest

Students with the Paragould High School EAST Lab Program [AR] are using their computer knowledge to help Paragould Police monitor sex offenders living in the city limits.

"They are updating our sex offender zoning map," said Captain Greg Trout with PPD.

- KAIT

The University of Redlands has received a $75,000 grant from the U.S Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) to develop a Spatial Decision Support (SDS) system that calculates and maps the potential impacts of energy projects on wildlife.

- press release

by Adena Schutzberg on 03/30 at 04:55 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

By request from the local SWAT team, students in the EAST Lab Program at Paragould High School [AR] are working on a huge project. They are constructing digitized maps, floor-by-floor, of a local hospital to better assist officers in handling an emergency situation.

- KAIT

Complaints from parents about schools manipulating the distance from home to school to give preference to some students in some schools has led a few schools to use Google Maps as a measurement tool.

“It’s the most transparent way to ascertain the distance between the school and the residence of a child. We have also adopted other methods including taking a declaration from the parents over their claims of the distance,” [Ashok] Pandey [principal of Ahlcon International School in Mayur Vihar] told PTI.

The tool used for the measurement and if the measurement is crow flies or along roads is not clear.

- FirstPost

Darren and Sandy Van Soye will spend the next 14 months travelling the world and teaching geography per a press release from Pricess Cruises.

The couple, who are chronicling their journey at www.TrekkingthePlanet.net, were inspired to plan their trek after they saw first-hand what a positive impact a previous family trip around the globe had on their two daughters' lives. Their full travel itinerary incorporates five different Princess Cruises voyages, totaling 96 days at sea. Both the first and last legs of their journey, plus three legs in between, will be aboard a Princess cruise ship.  ...

In total, the Van Soyes' journey will cover 50 countries on six continents over the course of the 424-day world tour. Throughout their travels, the couple will share 60 different geography education modules they have created as well as pictures and videos of their travels for anyone in the world to use. So far more than 700 classrooms around the world will be following their travels, representing 50,000 students.

Would you use such a resource in your teaching?

- press release

The Geographical Sciences Committee of the Royal Irish Academy aims to support the development of geographical studies throughout the island of Ireland. Following on from this we are pleased to provide an introductory resource [pdf] on the geography of climate justice prepared by the Committee (with support from the Mary Robinson Foundation – Climate Justice and the Environmental Protection Agency) for dissemination to geography students across Ireland. The resource is intended for use with transition year students in the Republic and for students from GCSE level upwards in Northern Ireland. 

Royal Irish Academy via @theaag

by Adena Schutzberg on 02/22 at 03:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Monday, February 06, 2012

At Holt Elementary in Durham, NC, the local GIS users are teaching about GIS via Google Earth. I'm not sure how I feel about this exercise:

To illustrate the difference that GIS technology makes, [GIS analyst from the GIS division of the city’s Technology Solutions Department, Robert] Cushman asked the students to locate their homes or school on paper maps within 30 seconds. They hunched over the maps, furiously searching for familiar street names or landmarks. At the end of the 30 seconds, just one student said he’d located his home.

“Now we don’t use maps like this anymore – very rarely,” Cushman said. “The maps we work with are made to be easy to use” – like traffic maps on morning TV newscasts and those used by vehicle navigation systems. 

- Herald Sun

Engineering researchers at the University of Arkansas are developing an emergency communications network that will maintain operation during natural disasters and provide critical warnings and geographic information to people affected by the disasters. The researchers are honing and testing the system now and expect to deploy a pilot network at the end of 2012.

Geo challenges include how to arrange the "mesh" network that enables the network and running GIS on low power devices. The work is funded by an NSF grant.

- press release

- project page

Researchers at the University of Maryland (UMD) and the University of Massachusetts, Boston (UMB) have created a detailed map (and accompanying study) of where terrorism attacks have occurred since 1970. 

...while certain areas (those surrounding Manhattan and Los Angeles, for example) have endured as terror 'hot spots' throughout the study, others have come and go. In the 2000s, for example, there has been a higher-than-average rate of attacks in Maricopa County, AZ, Phoenix's county. King County, WA, on the other hand, was a terror hot spot in the 1970s and 1980s, but has been largely quiet since.

- HuffPo

- press release

by Adena Schutzberg on 02/06 at 03:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Thursday, November 03, 2011

The Greenbrier EAST lab received an “EAST After Hours” grant funded by the Enhancing Education Through Technology grant made possible by the Arkansas Department of Education and is done in cooperation with the Southeast Educational Service Cooperative and the EAST Initiative. 

The high schoolers will map the fire hydrants for the volunteer fire department. They create the map, then train the fire fighters to use it via mobile devices. No details on the amount of the grant.

- The Cabin

Dabney S. Lancaster Community College [VA] announce several new courses for the Spring Semester that begins the week of January 9, 2012. Here's how the new GIS course is described:

Geographic Information Systems ( GIS 101 ) Whatever field interests you personally or professionally, GIS can likely be beneficial in some way. Whether you want to locate a piece of property anywhere in the world, or monitor pedestrian traffic patterns to select the spot for a new store you want to open, GIS can help. Learn the basics of this ever-growing field with instructor Brian Keiling in this three-credit late afternoon course. Meets on Wednesdays and Thursdays from 4:00-5:30 pm. Call 540-863-2894 or .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address).

- Rockbridge Weekly

Marion County [FL] school officials have ordered specialized mapping of the three largest sinkholes that opened during last month's rain deluge to determine if they are connected to large underground caverns.
 
Robert Knight, the district's supervisor of facilities, said the St. Johns River Water Management District must approve all repair plans and tests. He said the minimum cost to repair all nine sinkholes will be $65,000 total.
 
Electrical resistivity tests, basically an MRI of the ground, will map out underground caverns in the area of two Howard Middle School sinkholes and another at Ward-Highlands Elementary.
I wonder if officials will work with the schools to teach students about remote sensing??
 

But the Stanford Human Rights Education (SHRE) Initiative hopes to fill this gap with a “fresh and surprising” approach to human rights education.

Teaming up with community colleges, the Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education (SPICE), which has partnered with the Program on Human Rights, the School of Education and the Division of International Comparative and Area Studies (ICA), aims to create a human rights curriculum and build a network of support among educators.

“It’s an outreach effort through Stanford University by a coalition of departments,” said Robert Wessling, associate director for the Center for Russian, East European and Eurasian Studies, which is also partnering with SPICE. “We’re finding out that there are so many different ways to include human rights into a classroom and into so many different kinds of disciplinary studies. So, there’s not really a one size-fits-all, like a master curriculum of human rights.”

It'd be great if there's some geographic or GIS education in there, too.

- Stanford Daily

by Adena Schutzberg on 11/03 at 04:11 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Thursday, September 01, 2011

The Texas Permitting and Routing Optimization System (TRPOS) provides real-time, GIS-based mapping for routes and road restrictions. TRPOS, which took four years to build, allows Texas motor carriers to apply for routine permits online anytime, speeding things up for those needing and those creating the permits. So far more than half the users have needed no help in getting their permits. Texas issues 500,000 permits a year, more than any other state.

- Austin Biz Journal

Government Technology announced its top state, county and city websites on Sept 1. They are Arkansas, Stearns County, Minn., and Seattle and each one shows significant use of geospatial/mapping/filter of content by geography. Worth reading as guide to what your jurisdiction might do next!

- GovTech

Among those interviewed on Irene and its impact on Vermont is UVM's Jarlath O'Neil-Dunne, geospatial analyst, Spacial Analysis Laboratory.

- UVM News

by Adena Schutzberg on 09/01 at 03:38 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

 1 2 >

All Points Blog Newsletter

Catching geospatial news that others miss. Delivered daily.

Preview Newsletter | Archive

Follow

Feed  Twitter 

Recent Comments

Publications: Directions Magazine | Directions Magazine Francais | Directions Magazine Espanol
Conferences: Location Intelligence Conference | Rocket City Geospatial
© 2012 Directions Media. All Rights Reserved
194 Green Bay Road, Glencoe, IL 60022