The past decade has seen an explosion of new mechanisms for understanding and using location information in widely-accessible technologies. This Geospatial Revolution has resulted in the development of consumer GPS tools, interactive web maps, and location-aware mobile devices. These radical advances are making it possible for people from all walks of life to use, collect, and understand spatial information like never before.
This course brings together core concepts in cartography, geographic information systems, and spatial thinking with real-world examples to provide the fundamentals necessary to engage with Geography beyond the surface-level. We will explore what makes spatial information special, how spatial data is created, how spatial analysis is conducted, and how to design maps so that they’re effective at telling the stories we wish to share. To gain experience using this knowledge, we will work with the latest mapping and analysis software to explore geographic problems.
This class has been taught three times on Coursera [1] in a Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) format. More than 100,000 learners from around the world have enrolled in the class over three offerings since 2013. This site provides the primary content of the course as Open Educational Resources for anyone to use for self-study, adapt for their own teaching, or otherwise re-use under a Creative Commons License.
This course content is provided as-is. It's a free resource that you may use and re-use under a Creative Commons License. We cannot provide service or support for anyone who uses it, sorry.
Lesson One: The Geospatial Revolution; highlighting the massive changes in geospatial and mapping technology in recent years and their impact on people from all walks of life.
Lesson Two: Spatial is special; an exploration of spatial thinking and geographic thought to provide the context necessary to understand the underpinnings of the Geospatial Revolution.
Lesson Three: Spatial data; how spatial data is created, what makes it different from other types of information, and how it is managed using new technologies.
Lesson Four: Spatial analysis; basic techniques for solving geographic problems that take spatial relationships into account.
Lesson Five: Cartographic design; fundamentals necessary to design great maps to tell compelling stories about geographic patterns.
No background is required; all are welcome. If you're already a Geospatial Guru, then you might find this class a bit basic, in which case I hope you'll consider taking the online courses [2] that we offer at Penn State.
No readings aside from the course content are required, but students are encouraged to explore the Nature of Geographic Information [3] and the Geographic Information Science & Technology Body of Knowledge [4].
The class consists of short lecture videos, which are 5-10 minutes in length, as well as written and graphical content to cover key geospatial concepts and competencies. Each lesson features a hands-on lab assignment using ArcGIS Online [5] using their free public account option (no downloads or purchases required).
Links
[1] http://www.coursera.org/course/maps
[2] http://www.worldcampus.psu.edu/gep?cm_mmc=GEOSPATIAL+ED+13-14-_-MOOC_2-_-Online%3ABanner%3AOther-_-GEP+Tracking+URL+%28ONLNBO16463%29
[3] https://www.e-education.psu.edu/natureofgeoinfo/
[4] http://www.aag.org/bok
[5] http://www.arcgis.com/
[6] mailto:maps@psu.edu
[7] https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=yGUuUc4AAAAJ&view_op=list_works&sortby=pubdate
[8] https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Anthony_Robinson6