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Tagged: google maps, education

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Salisbury University Geographic Information Systems students were recently dubbed “rock stars” by some Maryland legislators.

They created large, full-color maps of land use in each of Maryland’s new legislative districts for all 188 state senators and delegates.

The school last made such maps six years ago. They are available for downloading and printing. The locator map is from ArcGIS.com but the indivdual ones are PDFs.

- DelMarva Now

C|net rewrote a tutorial from LifeHacker that details how to make a "crowdsourced food review map" for just you and your friends. It uses Google's MyMap. I thought i might be valuable to some educators.

- C|net

The Enterprise for Innovative Geospatial Solutions (EIGS) partnered with Digital Quest, a geospatial education and certification organization. The result:

The State of Florida recently adopted the “S.P.A.C.E.” (Spatial Projects and Community Exchange) certification series created by Digital Quest and sponsored by EIGS. Florida included these new Geospatial certifications as part of its 2012-13 approved condensed “Comprehensive Industry Certification List” for the state’s Career and Professional Education (CAPE) Act.

- press release

by Adena Schutzberg on 03/21 at 03:00 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

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

All the major map apps like Google Maps, Bing Maps, and Mapquest have walking directions as a standard feature, but the folks at Lumatic don’t think they are good enough. It is creating mobile maps designed for pedestrians, cyclists, and people who use public transit. Originally a TechStars company called Omniar, serial entrepreneur Scott Rafer (MyBlogLog, Lookery, Mashery) joined as CEO a year ago.

He recently raised a seed round of $800,000 from Joi Ito’s Neoteny Labs, 500 Startups, Chamath Palihapitiya, Allen Morgan, Ted Rheingold, and other angels.

Currently, the Android app covers San Fran and uses images and landmarks to route pedestrians/bikes.

- TechCrunch

Eric Fischer, digital cartographer extraordinaire, is at it again with a new series of maps that track the paths that smartphone-toting people take to travel through cities. Using geotagged tweets, the Oakland-based data visualization specialist has plotted the arteries of Twitter traffic for a host of cities around the world including Toronto.

His basemap? OSM.

BlogTo

Someone really clever (ok me) suggests that one could build an introductory GIS course built around OpenStreetMap. It would put more hands on developing the basemap even as it taught a variety of students the basics of GIS and data collection.

- Ignite Education Blog

Geocaching.com is the latest to move from Google Map to OpenStreetMap and Leaflet.

- Lat 47 (Geocaching blog)

by Adena Schutzberg on 02/15 at 03:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Thursday, January 05, 2012

On Monday, January 9th Geospatial Training will be releasing a free self-paced, web based, e-learning course titled: Bringing Data to Life with Google Fusion Tables

Part 1 of this course will be released in January with  Part 2: Programming the Google Fusion Tables API coming later this year. The course has video lectures and exercises. I wonder how geography/GIS eduators might use these resources?

Geospatial Training Blog

FIG is offering acadmic grants in areas related to geospatial to those who qualify who are in approrpiately designated countries. Proposals due Jan 15!

- announecement via @micheal_d_gould

The GeoTech Center has made ten sample questions for its National Geospatial Technology Comptetition Round 1 multiple choice test available in a PDF. I'm pleased to report I got them all correct, though some of them were on topics I never studied. The actual test must be taken by March 15 to be in the contest. This year both Round 1 (test) and Round 2 (project) scores will be used to determine the six semi-finalists who will be invited to the Esri EdUC.

- GeoTech Center Blog

by Adena Schutzberg on 01/05 at 02:59 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

As their computers warm up and students log in, April Salas assures them, “We’re going to learn two new things today. What took me six months to learn in college, you’re going to learn in three days.”

Her geographic information systems classroom was about to embark on mastering the art of geocoding, and “joining” data using a leading GIS software program, ArcMap 10.

I'm not sure if the first paragraph or the second make me more uncomfortable. It really too her six months to learn geocoding? Why? And, will the students master the process of geocoding - aka pushing buttons - or will the understand the goal and the challenges along the way. I'm also disappointed this article makes no mention of Geography Awareness Week or GIS Day.

- Record Gazette

Duke unveiled a new online map Friday that includes 3-D models of 325 buildings across the campuses. The map also includes satellite views and traditional two-dimensional street maps and offers overlays that display details such as dining locations and parking permit requirements, photos related to the buildings and videos linked to specific campus locations. The map is fully functional on mobile devices.

- Duke Today

Tulsa Community College is hosting a treasure hunt for GIS Day sponsored by ERGIS and GISCI. I figured it was a geocaching-like hunt. It's not.

GIS Day is a free event that invites the community and students to learn about TCC’s GIS Certificate program, to network within the geospatial community and to discover GIS career options. The day includes a scavenger hunt in which participants will use GIS technology to find items, and there is a cash prize. For complete rules, click HERE.

That page describes three different hunts: beginner (find things), intermediate (find things and note lat/lon) and advanced (find things, take picture, make a map). There are cash prizes, too. I'm curious to see how that plays out in downtown Tulsa.

- press release

by Adena Schutzberg on 11/15 at 05:53 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

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