GIS Education at UC Berkeley
GISC Short Courses provide a quick and in depth overview of Geographic Information Science.
Past Courses
“A Survey of GIS
Applications for the Social Sciences and
Humanities”
February 17, 2006, 9 am to 4 pm
Geographic Information
Systems (GIS) is an increasingly ubiquitous
technology in research, education, and our daily
lives. Scholars are discovering the
usefulness of GIS data in non-traditional fields
such as the humanities and social sciences.
This course serves as both an introduction to
GIS and to its application within an academic
environment.
Course Description:
The
Geographic Information Science Center at the
University of California Berkeley is offering a
one-day workshop: A Survey of GIS Applications for the
Social Sciences and Humanities. The
instructor, Kevin Mickey, is Director of
Professional Education and Outreach at the Polis
Center, Indiana University Purdue University
Indianapolis.
The
workshop will begin with an overview of the
types of spatial issues that confront
researchers and scholars in the social sciences
and humanities and the role that spatial
technologies such as geographic information
systems (GIS) can play in addressing those
issues. It will then proceed to a review
of the types of software tools that can be used
to collect, display, and analyze spatial
information. The workshop will also
provide information about where free and
fee-based spatial data or data that can be
spatially enabled - can be found as well as how
new data can be created that allow users to
address specific research or teaching goals.
During the course, participants will complete
hands-on exercises that provide an opportunity
for them to explore a number of GIS applications
that range from free to fee-based and from
simple to challenging in terms of their
complexity and capabilities. The exercises
will include a review of some of the powerful
tools that are available for manipulating the
display of map and tabular information, tools
that are available for spatially orienting
scanned imagery such as historic maps with other
sources of information so as to allow for a
comparison of past and present landscapes, tools
for integrating information such as the
locations of archaeological artifacts collected
from GPS instruments with other data, and tools
for performing analysis of spatial phenomena
such as population dispersion patterns.
Course participants will each receive a copy of
a free GIS data viewer as well as an evaluation
copy of the powerful desktop GIS software that
is explored in the class. They will also
receive a copy of the course data and a sample
collection of spatial data resources so that
they can explore the many tools that are
discussed in the course at their leisure
following course completion.
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