GEOG 583
Geospatial System Analysis and Design

Meet the Instructor

Fritz Kessler

Instructor

Fritz Kessler

Associate Professor

John A. Dutton e-Education Institute and the Department of Geography
The Pennsylvania State University
435 Earth and Engineering Sciences Building
University Park, PA 16802
USA

Phone: 814-863-1508

E-mail: Please use the course e-mail system (in Canvas). If the matter is urgent, and the course e-mail is not working correctly, you can try my personal e-mail at fck2@psu.edu.

Availability: Students are welcome to contact me by e-mail anytime; I usually am able to respond within 24 hours, except on weekends. If a question is of general interest, I may move the discussion to the course discussion forums. Although e-mail (i.e., course e-mail) and discussion forum correspondence is preferred, students may also contact me by telephone at the number above from 9.00 a.m. to 4.00 p.m. Monday through Friday.


Welcome to GEOG 583: Geospatial System Analysis and Design

I'm Fritz Kessler, one of the instructors for this course. Here is a little bit of my career history for you to digest.

I began my career in geography at Ohio University (a small state school located in Athens, OH) as a math major. During the summer between my junior and senior years I took an elective course in physical geography. During the first day's lecture the professor described "human" and "physical" as the two spheres of geography. He then added a side-bar comment that geographers also make maps. I was intrigued. After talking with the department's cartography professor later that day I switched majors to geography specializing in cartography. After graduation I worked for the US Geological Survey (USGS) as a Cartographic Technician creating maps and illustrations for various USGS publications. Desirous to advance my cartographic knowledge, I returned to academia and received my MS degree from Penn State. Here, I developed an expert system designed to assist in the selection of an appropriate map projection. My next career stop was a Systems Analyst for Intergraph Corporation in Huntsville, AL. I decided to return to map making and took a position with R. R. Donnelley and Sons in a small cartographic shop in Lancaster, PA. Eventually, I enrolled in a Ph.D. program at the University of Kansas where I studied cartography and geographic visualization. 

My professional academic career started as a faculty member at Frostburg State University (FSU) in August 1999. Located in Frostburg, MD, FSU is a very small state school in Western Maryland. While at FSU I taught courses in cartography, cartometrics, surveying, GIS, research methods, statistics, and other geographically related topics. I began teaching part-time through Penn State's World Campus in 2007 where I offered a course in datums, map projections, and coordinate systems. This course is still offered today as GEOG 897K: Map Projections for GIS Professionals. In June of 2015, I resigned my position at FSU and accepted an offer to join Penn State full-time. In addition to GEOG 583, my teaching responsibilities focus on cartography courses (both online and resident students).

I have amassed a solid research and publication record focusing mostly cartographically related topics. Specific research focus includes map projections, cartographic design, and history of cartography. I take on an active role in two cartographic societies: North American Cartographic Information Society (NACIS) and Cartography and Geographic Information Science (CaGIS).

In my spare time I race bicycles and play banjo in a local bluegrass band.

Thank you for joining the course and good luck!

- Fritz Kessler