Proceed to GeoCommunity Home Page


SpatialNewsGIS Data DepotGeoImaging ChannelGIS and MappingSoftwareGIS JobsGeoBids-RFPsGeoCommunity MarketplaceGIS Event Listings
HomeLoginAccountsAboutContactAdvertiseSearchFAQsForumsCartFree Newsletter

Sponsored by:


TOPICS
Today's News

Submit News

Feature Articles

Product Reviews

Education

News Affiliates

Discussions

Newsletters

Email Lists

Polls

Editor's Corner


SpatialNews Daily Newswire!
Subscribe now!

Latest Industry Headlines
SuperGeo to hold Biodiversity and Tourism GIS Training Courses
Merrick Awarded IDIQ by Corps of Engineers, Mobile District
Nottinghamshire Stops Vehicle Thieves in Their Tracks Thanks to Masternaut
GGP's GIS Addresses Corporate Information Needs in South Northamptonshire
ESRI GIS Services Available on Apps.gov

Latest GeoBids-RFPs
Wetland Inventories-OR
Photogrammetric Mapping-MO
Thermal Graphic Recorder-Canada
Surveying Services*Written in Polish
Geolocation Hardware-CA

Recent Job Opportunities
Marketing Specialist - Eonfusion - Full Time
Account Manager - Eonfusion - Full Time
GIS Developer
Senior GIS Applications Programmer

Recent Discussions
clr file DEM USGS
information or refrence for books
Opening .mxd file created in ArcGIS 9.3 ver
New GIS web: Using GIS architecture to play
Problem downloading e00 files - please help!

Related Links
>KanCRN
>GIS for secondary teachers
>USGS Mapping Lessons

The History and Application of GIS in Education

by Tom Baker, KanCRN Systems Specialist
GIS and Education

History

Geographic Information Systems and public K-12 education first experienced a taste of unity in 1992 with the publication of a paramount article by Robert Tinker, now of the Concord Consortium. Tinker's work exposed the possibilities of representing data with digital maps in many curricula. He described the power, flexibility and intrigue that maps offered to 4th, 5th, and 6th grade students studying various aspects of the environment as a part of the KidNet Project. Tinker also describes the significance of kids "Ground truthing" data, whereby students, using a map, verify the attribute data of a map or satellite image. He suggested that these data confirmations makes the processes of ground truthing and mapping "alive and immediate, providing motivation… for mastering experimental techniques, and for pursuing detailed investigations of interactions". Furthermore, Tinker noted "GIS software provides a critical link between the immediate and personal level of field observation and global effects and concerns" (Tinker, 42).

Trials and tribulations of GIS in K-12 Education

In their 1996 study of GIS and K-12 learning, Audet and Abegg corroborated many of Tinker's comments. They offer a few observations key to learning GIS in the classroom, including the ability for teachers to differentiate and hierarchically categorize problem-solving styles of students. They also documented the significant role that GIS terminology and concepts play in the acquisition of GIS skills. They continued by adding that "GIS supports problem-solving, but is difficult to predict [consistent achievement]". These findings and others seem to suggest that GIS is, at the proper developmental level, an effective tool for the instruction of students for data analysis.

Many other distinct advantages of GIS technology exist for K-12 students. Spatial literacy and geographic competence, defined as the ability to recognize the location or topology of map points and attributes, are two such advantages. Interpersonal skill development fostered through cooperative grouping and an enhanced "sense of existence of the wider world" often follow from the proper implementation of GIS instruction. Finally, the understanding of scale and resolution seems to be a critically important task for students, most readily nurtured through the use of GIS (Mackaness, 1994).

< NEXT >

Contents:
This article is the property of Tom Baker - tbaker@kancrn.org (c)2000. All rights reserved. Any copying or reproduction of the article in whole or in part is strictly prohibited.


Sponsored by:

For information
regarding
advertising rates
Click Here!

Copyright© 1995-2009 MindSites Group, LLC / Privacy Policy

GeoCommunity™, Wireless Developer Network™, GIS Data Depot®, and Spatial News™
including all logos and other service marks
are registered trademarks and trade communities of
MindSites Group, LLC