Geographic Information Systems GEO506, Fall 2014 Tu Th 5:00-6:20pm, 216 NSC The course is offered three times a year.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Rajlakshmi Ghosh Cadey Korson Being a TA in a Science Lab.
Advertisements

WFM 6202: Remote Sensing and GIS in Water Management © Dr. Akm Saiful IslamDr. Akm Saiful Islam WFM 6202: Remote Sensing and GIS in Water Management Akm.
Spatial USC John Wilson 22 September 2009.
© Copyright – David Gadish, Ph.D.1 CIS / Introduction to Business GIS Winter 2005 Lecture 10 Dr. David Gadish.
ITCS 3181 Logic and Computer Systems
Kent State University Welcome to Introduction to Professional Nursing Rebecca Goske, BSN, MSEd.
GTECH 201 Introduction to Mapping Sciences. Contact Information Instructors: Jochen Albrecht (and Tom Walter) Office: Hunter N1030 Office hours: We, Th.
General information CSE 230 : Introduction to Software Engineering
GIS 1001 Introduction to Geographic Information Systems.
CSE 322: Software Reliability Engineering Topics covered: Course outline and schedule Introduction, Motivation and Basic Concepts.
CSC 171 – FALL 2004 COMPUTER PROGRAMMING LECTURE 0 ADMINISTRATION.
School of Computer ScienceG53FSP Formal Specifications1 G53FSP Formal Specification Dr. Rong Qu Course Introduction
3D Urban Modeling Marc Pollefeys Fall 2006 / Comp Tue & Thu 14:00-15:15.
Quantitative Research Methods for Information Systems and Management (Info 271B) Course Introduction: Preface to Social Research and Quantitative Methods.
Charles Drew University, COSH UPH 509 An Introduction to Geographic Information Systems in Public Health Paul Robinson, PhD.
CIE 500D Introduction to Graduate Research in Structural Engineering(3) Course Outline Fall Semester 2007.
WFM 6202: Remote Sensing and GIS in Water Management © Dr. Akm Saiful IslamDr. Akm Saiful Islam WFM 6202: Remote Sensing and GIS in Water Management Dr.
Applied Geostatistics geog. buffalo. edu/~lbian/GEO497_597
Learning Unit Documents and Examples. Learning Units - basic building block of a course For iGETT a Learning Unit consists of –Three parts Instructor.
CPS120: Introduction to Computer Science Fall: 2002 Instructor: Paul J. Millis.
Introduction to the course January 6, Points to Cover  What is GIS?  The Course Brief description Text Format of the course Evaluation  The Instructors.
CHEMISTRY 102 TENTATIVE SCHEDULE FOR FALL WEEK I (Aug 18 th – Aug 22 th ) LAB: Intro to Lab, Lab Check-In, Angel Introduction M: Introduction to.
Introduction to Databases Computer Science 557 September 2007 Instructor: Joe Bockhorst University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee.
470 First Lecture1 CMPT 470 Instructor: –Wo-Shun Luk, ASB 10829, –Office Hours: 3:30 – 4:30 M W F TA: –Henry Zhang,
CSC 171 – FALL 2001 COMPUTER PROGRAMMING LECTURE 0 ADMINISTRATION.
Geographic Information Systems GEO481/506, Fall 2012 Tu Th 2:30-3:20pm, NSC 210 The course is offered three times a year.
Introduction Digital Image Processing Instructor: Dr. Cheng-Chien LiuCheng-Chien Liu Department of Earth Sciences National Cheng Kung University Last updated:
Remote Sensing GEO483/553, Fall 2013 Tu Th 2:00-3:20pm, 322 Fillmore.
CHEMISTRY 102 TENTATIVE SCHEDULE FOR FALL WEEK I (Aug 20 th – Aug 24 th ) LAB: Intro to Lab, Lab Check-In, Angel Introduction M: Introduction to.
Lecture Section 001 Spring 2008 Mike O’Dell CSE 1301 Computer Literacy.
GIS for Environmental Modeling GEO 479/559 Spring.
CPS120: Introduction to Computer Science Winter 2002 Instructor: Paul J. Millis.
Guofeng Cao CyberInfrastructure and Geospatial Information Laboratory Department of Geography National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) University.
URBPD 442 Urban and regional geospatial analysis This course provides theoretical and practical skills for analyzing spatial patterns and phenomena in.
UNIT 1: GIS DEFINITIONS AND APPLICATIONS
GEO221: Geographic Info. Systems (1) Dr. Ahmad BinTouq Assistant Professor Geography Department, UAE University,
CHEMISTRY 211 GENERAL CHEMISTRY Fall 2009 Section 002: Tu/Th 3:00 – 4:15 (IN 103) Text: Chemistry, The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change by M. S. Silberberg.
Physical Science 150 An Inquiry into Energy Course Syllabus Fall nova_course_website/nova_150_syllabus_sp06.html.
CSE 1105 Week 1 CSE 1105 Introduction to Computer Science & Engineering Time: Wed 4:00 – 4:50 Thurs 9:30 – 10:20 Thurs 4:00 – 4:50 Place: 100 Nedderman.
BME 110L / BIOL 181L Computational Biology Tools Introductory Remarks and Overview - who - why - what - how Logistics.
Course Overview for Compilers J. H. Wang Sep. 14, 2015.
Electronic Drafting DFT 58A&B Cliff Monroe - Instructor.
Physics 1B3-summer Lecture 11 Welcome to Physics 1B03 !
Remote Sensing GEO483/553, Fall 2010 Tu Th 12:30-1:50pm, 352 Fillmore.
Basic Computer (CS-101A) Accelerated Program City Junior College Tim Jaines Instructor.
Course Overview for Compilers J. H. Wang Sep. 20, 2011.
Geospatial Technology in Support of Teaching and Learning Presentation to ABCD-TIE | 9/8/2014 By: Jeff Blossom, Stacy Bogan, Fei Carnes, Giovanni Zambotti,
CEN 137 Computer Literature and Skills INTERNATIONAL BURCH UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT of INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES Dr. A. Turan Özcerit
CHEMISTRY 102 TENTATIVE SCHEDULE FOR Fall WEEK I (Aug 24 – Aug 28) LAB: Intro to Lab, Lab Check-In, Angel Introduction M: Introduction to course.
Physics 211 College Physics I. Introduction  Instructor:Larry Watson  Office:105 Witmer  Phone:   web:und.nodak.edu/instruct/lwatson/211.
MAT 279 Data Communication and the Internet Prof. Shamik Sengupta Office 4210 N Fall 2010.
이화여자대학교 Combining Cooperative Learning And Peer Instruction In Introductory Computer Science (SIGCSE 2000 Proceedings) 002OFE03 비서교육전공 4 학기 황 정 희 J. D.
BMTS Computer Programming Pre-requisites :BMTS 242 –Computer and Systems Nature Of the Course: Programming course, contain such as C, C++, Database.
Course Overview 1 MAT 279 Data Communication and the Internet Prof. Shamik Sengupta Office 4210 N
Microelectronic Circuits Spring, 2017
Introduction to Computing
Information Systems in Organizations Course Introduction Steve Sclarow
CENG 213 Data Structures Nihan Kesim Çiçekli
CS598CXZ (CS510) Advanced Topics in Information Retrieval (Fall 2016)
SCHEMATIC EYE.
Foundations of Visualization 8/30/05 Lecture Notes
WFM 6202: Remote Sensing and GIS in Water Management
GTECH 709 Course outline Course schedule (topics) week-by-week.
GTECH 709 Criteria for evaluation
Lecture 1: Introduction
GEO221: Geographic Info. Systems (1)
Class Introduction BSAD 30 Fall 2018 Dave Novak
CSC227: Operating Systems
Digital Signal Processing Spring, 2019
Course Introduction Data Visualization & Exploration – COMPSCI 590
Presentation transcript:

Geographic Information Systems GEO506, Fall 2014 Tu Th 5:00-6:20pm, 216 NSC The course is offered three times a year

Instructor Ling Bian, 120 Wilkeson Office Hours Tu Th 4-5pm or by appts

Lab Wilkeson 145 LabA Tue: 6:30-7:50pm, Lara Iverson LabB Thur: 3:30-4:50pm, Kejin Cui LabB Thur: 3:30-4:50pm, Kejin Cui LabC Tue: 12:30-1:50pm, Kejin Cui No lab in the first week

Access to WilkesonGIAL computer account printing account See Joe if there are still problems

Purpose There is a spatial component to all activities on the planet. Everything happens somewhere and knowing why and how these things happen at where and how these things are related to each other are important for us to fully understand the spatial phenomena. This course provides a general introduction to geographic information systems that help study these spatial phenomena. The goal of the course is to help students understand principles, application, and techniques of geographic information systems (GIS).

This is the introductory course of a series of GIS courses offered in the Geography Department. The lecture is divided in four sections. The first section introduces basics of a GIS system. The second section discusses GIS Data and their sources. The third section focuses on GIS functions in order to extract spatial information from geographic data. The fourth section covers GIS applications. GIS is useful to virtually any discipline that uses geographic information. The course should benefit students from a wide range of background.

A series of laboratory exercises are designed to help students familiarize with basic GIS operations. ArcGIS will be used as the primary software. Digital data of various themes will be used for the lab exercises. Students will gain experience with the following techniques: manipulating GIS data, querying spatial and attribute data, spatial join, projection, GPS, geocoding, 3D view, analysis, and online mapping applications. Labs

Text Lo, C.P. and Yeung, A. K.W. 2002, 2007 Concepts and Techniques of Geographic Information Systems. Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, New Jersey.

Project Proposal Graduate students are expected to develop a proposal for a project that uses GIS and present the proposed idea at the end of semester.

Grading System Undergraduate Graduate Mid-term exam 30% 30% Final exam 30% 30% Final exam 30% 30% Lab exercises40%30% Project Proposal 10% Total 100% 100% You will earn two identical grades for the lecture and the lab. The exams will be mostly based on lectures

Grad cut-off A A B B B C C C D D F<60

Tentative Schedule I. GIS System Aug 26Course introduction 28 Definition of GIS 28 Definition of GIS Sep 2 Coordinate systems Sep 2 Coordinate systems 4 Data models and data structures 4 Data models and data structures 9 Databases 9 Databases

Tentative Schedule (2) II. GIS Data Sep 11 Remote Sensing 16 GPS 16 GPS 18 Digital elevation models 18 Digital elevation models 23 TIGER 23 TIGER 25 Natural resources dat 25 Natural resources dat 30 Data Quality 30 Data Quality Oct 2 Visualization Oct 2 Visualization 7 Mid Term Exam 7 Mid Term Exam

Tentative Schedule (3) III. GIS Analysis Oct 9GIS analysis and modeling 14GIS analysis and modeling 14GIS analysis and modeling 16 GIS analysis and modeling 16 GIS analysis and modeling 21GIS software 21GIS software 23GIS analysis and modeling 23GIS analysis and modeling 28GIS software 28GIS software 30 GIS applications 30 GIS applications Nov 4Web GIS 6 Cloud GIS 6 Cloud GIS 11 Open source GIS 11 Open source GIS 13 GIS programming 13 GIS programming

Tentative Schedule (4) IV. GIS Applications Nov 18 GIS applications 20 GIS applications 20 GIS applications 25 GIS applications 25 GIS applications Dec 2 GIS applications 4 Conclusions 4 Conclusions Final Exam: Dec 9 (Tue) 7:15-10:15pm, 216 NSC (not a comprehensive exam, no multiple choices)

Plagiarism What is plagiarism and how to avoid it: defence-minister-resigns-plagiarism defence-minister-resigns-plagiarism

Expectation After this course, you should be comfortable to be a good GIS intern.