CAS GE 365 Introduction to Geographical Information Systems. The Applications of GIS are endless

Similar documents
GIS and Forest Engineering Applications FE 357 Lecture: 2 hours Lab: 2 hours 3 credits

Introduction to GIS (GEOG 401) Spring 2014, 3 credit hours

GEOG 508 GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS I KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF GEOGRAPHY FALL SEMESTER, 2002

GIS and Forest Engineering Applications FE 257 Lecture and laboratory, 3 credits

Lab Assistant: Kathy Tang Office: SSC 2208 Phone: ext

GTECH 380/722 Analytical and Computer Cartography Hunter College, CUNY Department of Geography

Introduction to Geographic Information Systems

AS 203 Principles of Astronomy 2 Introduction to Stellar and Galactic Astronomy Syllabus Spring 2012

ENVIRONMENT AND NATURAL RESOURCES 3700 Introduction to Spatial Information for Environment and Natural Resources. (2 Credit Hours) Semester Syllabus

COURSE SCHEDULE, GRADING, and READINGS

Geography 1103: Spatial Thinking

Geologic Remote Imaging - Geology 212 Syllabus Spring 2010

GIS FOR PLANNING. Course Overview. Schedule. Instructor. Prerequisites. Urban Planning 792 Thursday s 5:30-8:10pm SARUP 158

Angelina College Science and Mathematics Chemistry 1305 Introductory Chemistry General Syllabus

AS 101: The Solar System (Spring 2017) Course Syllabus

Page 1 of 5 Printed: 2/4/09

Urban Planning Internet Geographic Information Systems Fall 2010

Geographic Systems and Analysis

Historical Geology, GEOL 1120 (final version) Spring 2009

Angelina College Science and Mathematics Chemistry 1105 Introductory Chemistry Internet General Syllabus

University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire CHEM 103: General Chemistry- Syllabus Spring 2014

Emerging Issues in Geographic Information Science (GEP680): Projections, Scale, Accuracy, and Interpolation Lehman College, Spring 2017

GEOL 443 SYLLABUS. Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology, Spring 2013 Tuesday & Thursday 8:00 a.m. 9:15 a.m., PLS Date Subject Reading

GTECH 380/722 Analytical and Computer Cartography Hunter College, CUNY Department of Geography

GIST 4302/5302: Spatial Analysis and Modeling

GIST 4302/5302: Spatial Analysis and Modeling

Dr. Stephen J. Walsh Department of Geography, UNC-CH Fall, 2007 Monday 3:30-6:00 pm Saunders Hall Room 220. Introduction

USP/PLSI 493: Methods of Planning Data Analysis (4 credits) San Francisco State University Spring 2011

Labs: Chelsea Ackroyd Office Location: FMAB 005 Office Hours: M 08:45 11:45 AM or by appointment

Physics Fundamentals of Astronomy

Stellar Astronomy 1401 Spring 2009

Alien Worlds. Astronomy 105. Spring 2011

Physics Fundamentals of Astronomy

Texts 1. Required Worboys, M. and Duckham, M. (2004) GIS: A Computing Perspective. Other readings see course schedule.

GEOG 377 Introduction to Geographic Information Systems, Spring, 2002 Page: 1/6

ATM 101X: Weather and Climate of Alaska

Geospatial Intelligence


Math 200 A and B: Linear Algebra Spring Term 2007 Course Description

URP 4273 Section 3058 Survey Of Planning Information Systems (3 Credits) Spring 2017

Techniques for Science Teachers: Using GIS in Science Classrooms.


ARCGIS TRAINING AT KU GIS LABS: INTRODUCTION TO GIS: EXPLORING ARCCATALOG AND ARCGIS TOOLS

URP 4273 Section 8233 Introduction to Planning Information Systems (3 Credits) Fall 2017

Chemistry 2281G: Inorganic Chemistry of the Main Group Elements

Practical applications of GPS surveying

ESS 102 Space and Space Travel

CHEM 1100 General Chemistry I: Summer 2019

Physics 9, Introductory Physics II Spring 2010

GEOG People and their Environment Section 01 Spring 2015 Monday and Thursday 1:10 pm to 2:25 pm Hunter West 511

CHEM 333 Spring 2016 Organic Chemistry I California State University Northridge

Physics 141 Course Information

FENG CHIA UNIVERSITY

This Week s Topics. GIS and Forest Engineering Applications. FE 257. GIS and Forest Engineering Applications. Instructor Information.

GTECH 380/722 Analytical and Computer Cartography Hunter College, CUNY Department of Geography

Physics 141 Course Information

EEOS 465 / 627 Environmental Modeling with Raster GIS. David Tenenbaum EEOS 465 / 627 UMass Boston

Geog418: Introduction to GIS Fall 2011 Course Syllabus. Textbook: Introduction to Geographic Information Systems edited by Chang (6th ed.

Health and Medical Geography (GEOG 222)

Physics 18, Introductory Physics I for Biological Sciences Spring 2010

GE 331: Political Geography Spring Office Hours: Tuesday, Thursday 11-12:30; Wednesday 1-2 Phone:

Syllabus: Physical Chemistry Lab II CHE 330, Spring 2018

AS 102 The Astronomical Universe (Spring 2010) Lectures: TR 11:00 am 12:30 pm, CAS Room 316 Course web page:

Physics Fall Semester. Sections 1 5. Please find a seat. Keep all walkways free for safety reasons and to comply with the fire code.

Introduction to Oceanography Cabrillo College, Spring Semester, 2018 Instructors: David Schwartz & Lauren Hanneman

0703C101 General Chemistry I(With Lab)

University Studies Natural Science Course Renewal

No. of Days. ArcGIS 3: Performing Analysis ,431. Building 3D cities Using Esri City Engine ,859

No. of Days. ArcGIS Pro for GIS Professionals ,431. Building 3D cities Using Esri City Engine ,859

AS The Astronomical Universe. Prof. Merav Opher - Fall 2013

URP 4273 Section 3058 Survey Of Planning Information Systems (3 Credits) Spring 2018

HUMAN GEOGRAPHY AND CONTEMPORARY SOCIETY Global Patterns and Processes Spring 2009

Astronomy 102/104: Our Solar System MWF 11:15-12:05P, Uris Auditorium Spring 2008 Course Syllabus

Welcome to Chemistry 376

Sul Ross State University Syllabus for General Chemistry I; CHEM 1311:02 (Spring 2017)

PHYSICS 206, Spring 2019

HISTORY 1XX/ DH 1XX. Introduction to Geospatial Humanities. Instructor: Zephyr Frank, Associate Professor, History Department Office: Building

HIRES 2017 Syllabus. Instructors:

Course overview. Grading and Evaluation. Final project. Where and When? Welcome to REM402 Applied Spatial Analysis in Natural Resources.

SPRING 2014 Department of Physics & Astronomy, UGA PHYS 4202/6202 Electricity and Magnetism II (as of Jan. 07/2014)

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. CE Surveying

A SURVEY OF ORGANIC CHEMISTRY CHEMISTRY 1315 TuTr 9:35-10:55 am, Boggs B6

Geography and Regional Planning Spring 2007 Semester

DRAFT SYLLABUS. Please use Blackboard to send messages.

Introduction to Engineering Analysis - ENGR1100 Course Description and Syllabus Tuesday / Friday Sections. Spring '13.

Montgomery County Community College GEO 210 Introduction to Geographic Information Systems (GIS) 3-2-2

Snowden Cartography 1 GEOG 315:001 Cartography Thursdays 4:00 6:30PM F375 Fall 2010 Dr. Snowden Course Description

GEOG 410: SPATIAL ANALYSIS SPRING 2016

CHEM 4725/8725 Organometallic Chemistry. Spring 2016

Math Linear Algebra Spring Term 2014 Course Description

ENV208/ENV508 Applied GIS. Week 1: What is GIS?

Astro 32 - Galactic and Extragalactic Astrophysics/Spring 2016

MATH 345 Differential Equations

GIST 4302/5302: Spatial Analysis and Modeling Lecture 1: Overview

GIS PORTFOLIO MOHAMED MAGDY MOHAMED HUSSAIN GIS ENGINEER. UWF GIS ONLINE CERTIFICATE GIS Internship (GIS4944)

Chemistry 14C: Structure of Organic Molecules - Winter 2017 Version 56

GEOLOGY 100 Planet Earth Spring Semester, 2007

Physics 105 Spring 2017

REMOTE SENSING OF THE ATMOSPHERE AND OCEANS

Geography 3410: Urban Applications of GIS Spring 2015 Boettcher West #125 Mon & Wed 2:00p 3:50p

Transcription:

Spring 2007 CAS GE 365 Introduction to Geographical Information Systems Boston University Department of Geography and Environment The Applications of GIS are endless images from www.esri.com CAS GE 365 Spring 2007 - Walker Page 1 of 7

see http://www.esri.com/industries.html for applications in your area of interest. CAS GE 365 Spring 2007 - Walker Page 2 of 7

CAS GE 365 Introduction to Geographical Information Systems Instructor Professor Joan Walker CAS 439C 617 353-5743 joanw@bu.edu Office hours: Tuesday 3:30-5:00PM and Thursday 10:30AM-12:00PM Teaching Feng Zhao Fellow CAS 334 617 353 8846 zhao26@bu.edu Office hours: Tuesday and Thursday 9:00-10:30 Class Meetings Tuesday and Thursday 2:00-3:30 PM, CAS 327 Class Web Site Objectives Description http://courseinfo.bu.edu/courses/07sprgcasge365_a1/ The objectives of the course are to: (1) Introduce basic GIS and spatial analysis skills. (2) Provide opportunities to process, visualize, and analyze spatial data. (3) Emphasize the significance of spatial data, GIS, and spatial statistics to the study of a variety of problems. A Geographic Information Systems (GIS) is a collection of computer hardware, software, and geographic data for capturing, storing, updating, manipulating, analyzing, and displaying all forms of geographically referenced information (ESRI Press). GIS is employed by consultants, businesses, analysts, researchers and government in diverse areas such as geography, land use and transportation planning, environment, utilities, sociology, archeology, criminology, wildlife habitat management, health and human services, and environmental analysis. If you think you ve never personally used GIS before, you certainly have experienced its power through many of the GIS applications such as maps in the media, interactive maps on the web, GoogleEarth, Mapquest (or other websites providing directions), auto navigation systems, and perhaps even Geocaching. This introductory course provides you with the essentials required for a beginning GIS practitioner and researcher. Topics covered include hardware and software components, methods of data capture and sources of data, nature and characteristics of spatial data and objects, data structures, elementary GIS operations, raster and vector GIS, and an overview of various applications using GIS. The course emphasizes hands on learning by spending over half of the in-class time working hands on with GIS and spatial data. CAS GE 365 Spring 2007 - Walker Page 3 of 7

Readings Software/Lab Most readings are assigned from the textbook for the course (available for purchase at the BU bookstore): Chang, Kang-tsung (2008) Introduction to Geographic Information Systems, Fourth edition, McGraw Hill Higher Education. There will also be supplementary readings, which will either be downloadable from the web, handed out in class, or put on reserve. The software used for the course is ArcGIS 9, which is installed in the CAS 327 computer lab. Completion of assignments and the final project will require students to work independently in the computer lab outside of the class session. In order to log onto the machines in 327, you need to link your accounts to Active Directory using the following link (a one-time operation): http://www.bu.edu/computing/accounts/ad/cas Requirements 25% Lab Exercises (Some individual and some group) and Grading 20% Midterm Exam Tuesday March 6 in class 20% Final Project (Group, with a final presentation) 30% Final Exam Monday May 7, 2:00-4:00 5% Class participation The class participation includes (among the usual things) a brief presentation to the class. Each of you will need to find a partner in the class, select an exciting GIS application (e.g., found from the web or media) and give a 5 minute presentation to the class that describes the application area and how they are using GIS. Attendance at all lectures and labs is mandatory. You are expected to be at class on time (particularly since presentations by your fellow students will start many of the lectures). Assignments are to be turned in at the beginning of class on the day they are due. On any individual lab assignments, you are encouraged to discuss the problem with your peers but you must produce and write-up work independently. Any deviation from any of these rules will result in a grade reduction. Both the midterm and final exams will contain a written portion and an ArcGIS portion. Students are reminded of their responsibility to know and understand the provisions of the Academic Conduct Code. Copies are available in CAS 105. CAS GE 365 Spring 2007 - Walker Page 4 of 7

Topics to be covered (schedule follows) Part 1: Introduction 1a. Introduction to GIS Introduction to GIS and spatial thinking. READING: Chang Chapter 1 NY Times (July 18, 2005) Marrying Maps to Data for a New Web Service 1b. Visualization & Data Exploration Spatial display of information and basic query operations. Introduction to ArcGIS READING: Tufte Chapters 1 and 2 Chang Chapters 10 and 11 LAB: Mapping Africa Part 2: Data, Data, Data 2a. Data Models Discuss the two primary data models: Vector (point, line, area) and Raster (grid cells). READING: Chang Chapters 3 and 5 2b. Data Sources and Editing Where do data come from? How can we import them into GIS? READING: Chang Chapter 6, Chapter 8, and Chapter 17 (sections 1 and 2) LAB: Serving Boston s Transit Dependent Population 2c. Data Coordinate Systems The world is round and the GIS display flat thus, the importance of coordinate systems. READING: Chang Chapter 2 LAB: Coordinate Systems Part 3: Spatial Analysis With spatial analysis, we ll start doing calculations with the data, e.g. proximity analysis and buffers. 3a. Spatial Analysis Vector READING: Chang Chapter 12 LAB: Deforesting Alaska or Cholera outbreak 3b. Spatial Analysis Raster READING: Chang Chapter 13 LAB: Jamaican bobsled 3c. Spatial Analysis Networks and Algorithms READING: Chang Chapter 18 LAB: Optimizing deliveries CAS GE 365 Spring 2007 - Walker Page 5 of 7

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Midterm Exam & Spring Break ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ Part 4: Advanced Topics 4a. Global Positioning System Guest Lecturer: Francesca Scire' Scappuzzo Seidel The Global Positioning System (GPS) is a satellite-based navigation system made up of a network of satellites placed into orbit by the US Department of Defense. GPS was originally intended for military applications, but in the 1980s, the government made the system available for civilian use. Signals are transmitted from these satellites to GPS receivers to determine location, speed and direction. GPS has a wide range of applications including study of earthquakes, telecommunication networks, and auto navigation systems. In this module, you ll learn how GPS works, various issues in using it, and get hands on application with GPS receivers. READING: TBA LAB: TBA 4b. Introduction to Spatial Statistics The purpose of these lectures is to give you a hint of the world of spatial statistics a critical application area of GIS. Spatial statistics moves beyond observing where things are located towards investigating why particular spatial patterns exist, e.g. patterns in lung cancer, voting, owl nests, etc. READING: TBA LAB: No lab, although there will be in-class exercises. 4c. The Group Project GIS Applications to Health in Boston In collaboration with medical researchers at the BU medical campus. The purpose of the final project is to give you a chance to put your knowledge to test and work creatively with GIS. You will work in small groups of 2 to 4 students, each group designing their own project objectives and carrying the project through to develop findings. On Thursday, April 12 you will submit a one page project proposal defining your team, your objectives, and your research plan. The final deliverable of the project will be in the form of a PowerPoint file and an oral presentation to the class summarizing your objectives, methods, and findings. The final projects will be presented in class on April 24, April 26 and May 1. For example projects from last year, see http://people.bu.edu/joanw/classproj.html READING: TBA CAS GE 365 Spring 2007 - Walker Page 6 of 7

Approximate Schedule The schedule, topics, labs and readings are subject to change, in which case announcements will be made in class as appropriate. Date Topic T Jan 16 1a. Intro to GIS R Jan 18 1b. Visualization and Data Exploration T Jan 23 1b. Visualization and Data Exploration R Jan 25 2a. Data - Models T Jan 30 2b. Data - Sources and Editing R Feb 1 2b. Data - Sources and Editing T Feb 6 2c. Data - Coordinate System R Feb 8 3a. Spatial Analysis - Vector T Feb 13 3a. Spatial Analysis - Vector R Feb 15 3b. Spatial Analysis - Raster T Feb 20 NO CLASS (Monday Schedule) R Feb 22 3b. Spatial Analysis - Raster T Feb 27 3c. Spatial Analysis - Networks R Mar 1 3c. Spatial Analysis - Networks T Mar 6 MIDTERM EXAM R Mar 8 4c. Introduction to Group Project T Mar 13 NO CLASS (Spring Break) R Mar 15 NO CLASS (Spring Break) T Mar 20 4a. Global Positioning System R Mar 22 4a. Global Positioning System T Mar 27 4a. Global Positioning System R Mar 29 4a. Global Positioning System T Apr 3 4c. Further discussion of group project R Apr 5 4c. Group project work time T Apr 10 4b. Introduction to Spatial Statistics R Apr 12 4c. Group project work time T Apr 17 4b. Introduction to Spatial Statistics R Apr 19 4c. Group project work time T Apr 24 4c. Project presentations R Apr 26 4c. Project presentations T May 1 4c. Project presentations R May 3 Course wrap up M May 7 FINAL EXAM, Monday May 7 2:00-4:00 PM CAS GE 365 Spring 2007 - Walker Page 7 of 7