* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download - EdCommunity
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
ED 589: Investigations in Spatial Thinking INSTRUCTORS OF RECORD: EMAIL: PHONE: Carolyn Gardner and Dan Morris [email protected] and [email protected] 719-440-5528 FAX: ADDRESS: 303-337-6845 11777 Harvard Ave, Aurora CO 80017 COURSE CREDIT: 2.0 graduate credits COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Joseph J. Kerski, Ph.D. Education Manager Esri 1 International Court Broomfield CO 80021-3200 USA Tel: 303-449-7779 x 8237 Cell: 303-625-3925 [email protected] Twitter: @josephkerski DATES, TIMES, NUMBER OF SESSIONS: Spring Semester (beginning March 20th – April 30th) Duration: 5 weeks long: Asynchronous. Time estimated: 6 -7 hours per week online. This course includes 5 modules, each composed of discussion forums, hands-on work with geotechnologies, quizzes, and a student-directed project that begins during the first week of the course and runs throughout the course. This blended facilitated course includes 30 hours of interactive tutorials, readings, exercises, individual work and facilitated discussion. This on-line facilitated course work will take place over a 5 week period, and eNetColorado Certified Facilitators will be provided for this course. COURSE DESCRIPTION: This course builds on the course: Isn’t that Spatial? Analyzing Our World Using Digital Maps and Spatial Thinking. Participants are strongly advised to take the first course before taking this course, but this Investigations in Spatial Thinking Course: Module 2: Population and Ecoregions. Page 1 of 12 course will include review of the foundations of Spatial Thinking and geotechnologies so taking ED 589 is not absolutely necessary, particularly if the participant is familiar with these foundations and the technology. This course, Deeper Investigations in Spatial Thinking, will deepen participants’ understanding of how to enhance their own curriculum using spatial analysis with web-based maps and Geographic Information Systems (GIS). These “geotechnology” tools help foster inquiry, critical thinking, and problem-based learning through the investigation of real problems and issues in our world from a local to a global scale, such as weather, water, business location optimization, natural hazards, and historical and current events. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ COURSE OBJECTIVES: Upon the completion of this course, each participant will: (1) Understand how to use existing web mapping tools and geotechnologies necessary to teach and foster spatial analysis in geography, earth and biological sciences, history, mathematics, technology, STEM, computer science, and in other disciplines. (2) Understand where to find data, lessons, and foundational readings and videos that focus on investigating standards-based and relevant issues to the 21stCentury including but not limited to population dynamics, hurricanes, energy, water, current events, sustainable agriculture, coastal erosion, and business site location. (3) Know how to use, create, and share maps to create a project of their own choosing that incorporates geotechnology skills, the spatial perspective, and content knowledge within their own course(s). ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES: Upon completion of this course the participant will be able to: Use a greater variety of web-based mapping and GIS tools than they could before beginning this course. Specifically, they will create, save, and share data and maps using ArcGIS Online (AGOL), Story Maps, and ArcGIS Explorer Online presentations. Expand their own critical thinking about maps and spatial data. Identify connections between the relevance of spatial thinking and GIS to education and society. Integrate multimedia, presentation, and assessment with geospatial technologies. Plan, create, and implement an instructional project using web mapping tools. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Investigations in Spatial Thinking Course: Module 2: Population and Ecoregions. Page 2 of 12 TEXTS, READINGS, INSTRUCTIONAL RESOURCES: The course will include key readings from the GIS education research community about spatial thinking and GIS in education from research articles, online journals, and current e-newspapers. It will also engage the participants in hands-on work using web-based GIS tools such as ArcGIS Online, Story Maps, and ArcGIS Online presentations to investigate topics and issues from the local to the global scale. Course materials will be provided via the eNetColorado Moodle site (http://moodle.enetcolorado.org). ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ COURSE REQUIREMENTS: Reading and watching assigned text and videos focusing on spatial thinking. Hands-on work using web GIS tools. Responses via online forums to the readings and hands-on work. A project of their own choosing where they incorporate spatial thinking and web GIS. Participant feedback and assessment are important components of this course. In order to provide a high-quality learning experience and ensure that participants receive regular feedback, facilitators will use the Gradebook within the Moodle platform to document each participant's performance on required assignments, including the forum discussion, quizzes, hands-on activities, and the project. In order to receive credit for the course, participants must attend and actively participate in all class modules unless alternative arrangements are approved in advance. Assignments need to be completed by the due date assigned by the instructor. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ GRADE DISTRIBUTION AND SCALE: 10% - Participation in online Discussion Forum Responses 20% - Quizzes 50% - Hands-on activities 20% - Project Completion 2% per week 4% per week 10% per week Grade Scale: 93 – 100 % = A 85 – 92% = B 80 – 84% = C ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Description of Weekly Modules: Each week includes 5 main components: Investigations in Spatial Thinking Course: Module 2: Population and Ecoregions. Page 3 of 12 Introduction Readings and Reflections Hands-on Activities Quiz Your Project Module Theme / Week Readings with Discussion Forum 0 (before and as course begins) Orientation 1 Introduction: Foundations of Spatial Thinking --Course Goals --Structure of Course --technical notes --How to sign up for graduate credit --Syllabus --Add your location and information to a live ArcGIS Online web map Foundations of Spatial Thinking: -- Watch and respond to Course Introduction Video --Read selections from NRC report, Gersmehl examples; Kerski 3 legged stool framework. Hands-on Activities Quizzes Project of Participants’ Own Choosing Telling Stories with Maps: Examine 3 ways to tell a story with maps: Telling Stories with Maps: Spatial Thinking and web GIS skills; ways to tell stories with maps. Your Project: Planning, Create AGOL Public Account: Plan your project; create a storyboard. --Think about the desired theme, data, scale, and so on. --Create AGOL personal public account. Your Project: Adding, Symbolizing, Metadata: Add content to your map using existing map services. --Symbolize your data. 1) ArcGIS Online multimedia maps. 2) ArcGIS Online presentations. 3) Esri Story Maps: 2 Global Population and Ecoregions Investigating Global Population and Ecoregions: -Describe the population density where you live and your ecoregion. --Discuss ecoregions globally and Investigating Global Population and Ecoregions: -- Build an ecoregions and population map; save it; share it. Examine relationships between ecoregions, latitude, climate, and Investigating Global Population and Ecoregions: Content: Ecoregions. Skills: Adding data, changing scale, Investigations in Spatial Thinking Course: Module 2: Population and Ecoregions. Page 4 of 12 regionally. 3 Weather and Water Investigating Weather and Water: --Describe climate, weather, and water use in your region. --Predict the future water situation in your region. --Reflect on water use in the USA via USGS report. --Examine current streamflow conditions. 4 Location Analytics Location Analytics: --Discuss data sources. --Discuss data quality issues -- Discuss privacy issues surrounding geotechnologies. 5 Telling Your Story with Web Maps Telling Your Story with Web Maps: -Discuss the effectiveness of maps as a story telling tool. -- Examine (1) AGOL maps with bookmarks and popups; (2) AGOL presentations: Weird Earth, Why altitude. --Examine population and discuss ecoregions most under threat from climate change and population growth. Investigating Weather and Water: Examine relationships between terrain and watersheds. --Examine relationships between current weather and streamflow. Digging Deeper: --Draw a line across watershed and Use the terrain profile template. --Examine Esri disaster response maps using a variety of real-time data. Location Analytics: -Examine pattern of Bail Bonds and Car Washes in OKC. --Add a mystery business. --Embed a map in a web page. Telling Your Story with Web Maps: --Create an ArcGIS Online presentation from the volcanoes of the world web cam map. examining relationships; saving and sharing maps. --Save your map. --Adding metadata to your map. Investigating Weather and Water: Content: Weather, water, terrain. Skills: Adding data via other means (tables, creation of map notes, share your map, discuss AGOL groups. Your Project: Map Notes, Template Publishing: Add content to your map via map notes. --Publish your map to a mapping applications template. Location Analytics: Content: Data sources, quality, and privacy. --Spatial patterns of businesses. Your Project: Add Tabular Data, Embed in Web Page: Add content to your map via data tables. --Embed 1 of your maps in a web page. Telling Your Story with Web Maps: -Content: Skills: Creating presentation. --1 most useful thing from this course? --What 2 topics or skills you would like in next course? Your Project: Create Presentation and Tell Your Story: -Create, save, and share presentation that describes your project. End of Course survey. Investigations in Spatial Thinking Course: Module 2: Population and Ecoregions. Page 5 of 12 GIS in Education, 10 Landscapes AGOL, 10 most expensive streets, and (3) Story Maps. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Module 2: Investigating Global Population and Ecoregions Welcome to Module 2! In this module, you will have the opportunity to investigate global population and ecoregions, build additional skills with web mapping tools, and make more progress on your own project. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Module 2 Readings and Reflections Welcome to Module 2: Investigating global population density and ecoregions. Now that you have reflected on some definitions of spatial thinking and had some practice with ArcGIS Online, we will now dig a little deeper using global population density and ecoregions as the topic for this week’s investigation. Your assignment for Module 2 is to: (1) Read the text in the Module 2 Readings and Reflections section, reflect upon the contents, and share your reactions to these questions with your colleagues taking this course. (2) Complete the Module 2 hands-on activity by working through the tasks posted there and uploading your answers to the questions into the hands-on activity reflection area. (3) Complete Quiz 2. Investigations in Spatial Thinking Course: Module 2: Population and Ecoregions. Page 6 of 12 (4) Do further work on your project that you began thinking about in Module 1. +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Module 2: Investigating Global Population and Ecoregions A) The Whys of Where. The most important question that a spatial thinker asks is not "where?" but "why?" Where by itself is important, but to stop there cuts short spatial thinking and the subsequent spatial analysis that could result. At its best, where by itself is a scaffold upon which we can hang other geographic knowledge and build skills. At its worst, where by itself is the place-name, imports-and-exports, and capes-and-bays memorization stereotypes that makes geographers and educators twitchy. To nurture spatial thinking, we must couple the where with why. B) Data: Opportunity and Challenge We have a variety of data sets at our fingertips nowadays with web mapping tools to examine themes and issues in our world at a variety of scales, to help us understand the whys of where. For example, in terms of population, we not only have the locations of cities, but the size of those cities. We not only have the total population counts, but also the population density, how the population is changing, and the characteristics of the population such as median age, ethnicity, median income, education level, life expectancy, and many more variables. We can examine population related to other phenomena, represented as map layers, to determine the impact of the population on those phenomena or layers. In this module, you will examine population density and ecoregions to determine the impact of population on those ecoregions, and also the effect that elevation and latitude has on the pattern of world ecoregions. One of the essential components when using web maps is the “details” or “metadata” about the map. This describes characteristics about the map that are important for 2 main things – (1) keywords that help people search for and find maps, and (2) providing information that is important for those using your map to be able to judge whether it is something they wish to use in their own decision making. Metadata is therefore “data about the map.” Do you want to be able to find your map in the future? Just as it is important to name your files on your own computer with descriptive names (rather than file1.doc, file2.doc, etc), it is important to name your web maps descriptively, as well as add keywords to further aid in finding them. Secondly, as it becomes easier and easier to create web maps that contain layers from a myriad of sources, it becomes more important than ever to document your data sources. Otherwise, what may be wonderful maps with rich content may not be used because the sources are not documented, and thus they are questioned. Investigations in Spatial Thinking Course: Module 2: Population and Ecoregions. Page 7 of 12 This documentation should include things such as who created the data, when it was created, how often it is updated, the sources used to create it, the scale at which it was created, the features contained in the map, the attributes of those features and what they mean, the map projection used, the explanation of the classification used on the map, the range of the variables used, the citation information that should be used with the map, and the restrictions of use on the map including the copyright, if any. The Federal Geographic Data Committee (FGDC) in the USA, as well as the International Standards Organization (ISO) maintains metadata standards for spatial data content, and certainly, other information could be included in the metadata documentation. But at a minimum, always keep in mind to document your map as fully as possible, especially if you make it public. C) Ecoregions and Population 1) What is an ecoregion? Do some research if you need to in order to provide an answer. While there are several definitions, often at opposition with each other, it is generally accepted that an ecoregion nests inside a biome. A biome is a very large region containing a certain continuum of plants, animals, climate, and vegetation, for example, grasslands, temperate rainforest, tropical rainforest, taiga, desert, and so on. Furthermore, an ecoregion usually contains some information about the specific location in which it is located. For example, the North American mid-latitude Great Plains shortgrass prairie ecoregion is located in the Steppe Grassland biome. This biome can also be found in Argentina, in Russia, and elsewhere in the world, but the ecoregion is specific to that part of the biome in west-central North America. 2) In what ecoregion would you say you live and work? 3) Name 3 factors that influence population density in a given area. 4) Describe the population density in the neighborhood in which you live and work. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Investigations in Spatial Thinking Course: Module 2: Population and Ecoregions. Page 8 of 12 Module 2: Hands-on Activity Module 2 Hands On Activity. Complete the following tasks and respond. In this hands-on activity, you will investigate the relationship between land use, population density, and ecoregions. Go to http://www.arcgis.com/home - ArcGIS Online - and search for and then open the following ArcGIS Online map: http://www.arcgis.com/home/webmap/viewer.html?webmap=8b6d6ce07c4244bc8b3a9f7c1c274e48 This map shows ecoregions, population density, and imagery. Notice the buttons above the text to the left of the map image: About This Map, Show Contents, and Map Legend. Get comfortable with what these buttons do. The map will look similar to that below. Use Bookmarks and select World. Turn off the ecoregions layer. 1) Describe 2 characteristics of world population density. Investigations in Spatial Thinking Course: Module 2: Population and Ecoregions. Page 9 of 12 Change the base map back and forth from Imagery to Terrain With Labels so that you can refer to country and city names that are part of the Terrain with Labels layer, if you need to. 2) Examine the “details” behind the population world (density) layer. Who created this data, and what sources did they use? Use Bookmarks and select India-Nepal. Toggle between population density and the imagery base map. Try making the population density layer transparent. 3) Name 2 reasons for the difference between the population density in northern India versus that of Nepal. 4) Turn on the ecoregions layer. Name the predominant ecoregions in the most densely settled regions of northern India. Name 2 ways in which the dense settlement here has an effect on the ecoregions of this area. 5) Describe the ecoregion and the population density in the region in which you work based on the map you are examining. How does the population density compare against your observation from the first part of Module 2, where you were asked to reflect upon the population density without the aid of a map? ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Module 2: Your Project Module 2: Your Project: Adding, Symbolizing, Metadata Open ArcGIS Online and log into your account. This is your public account (that is, not an ArcGIS Online organizational subscription account, which we can talk about later. However, if you are using an organizational subscription account, that, too, will work just fine for this course.). Think about the project you would like to build for this course that you could use in your own instruction. You could begin your project by opening an existing map and modifying it, or starting with a new map and adding data to it. Either way, begin your map project. 1) Make sure there is at least 1 layer in your map besides the base map. Remember that these layers can be added in many ways, such as from field data that you collect, from points, lines, and areas that you draw on the map screen, from GIS shapefiles, from text and spreadsheets, and from content served from a variety of nonprofit organizations, industry, academic institutions, government agencies, and other organizations around the world. Use the Add button and add at least 1 layer to your map. If you need some help: Investigations in Spatial Thinking Course: Module 2: Population and Ecoregions. Page 10 of 12 A deeper dive into ArcGIS Online: My series of videos on using ArcGIS Online in education: Here is the link: Copy this into a browser: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3m0I5SmnVc0&list=PLiC1i3ejK5vtyUTMRDSZYcSZwJ12E2VCN Or click below: Lots more video tutorials are here: http://video.arcgis.com 2) Recall that when you worked with the population density and ecoregions map, there were a few bookmarks included. In your map that you are constructing here, make sure you create at least 2 bookmarks that direct the reader of your map to 2 different locations at 2 different scales. 3) Recall in the population density-ecoregions investigation that you examined the metadata for the map. For the map that you are constructing here, access the metadata “details” area, and edit that area: Begin populating it with information about what your map is all about, where you are obtaining the data for it, and an appropriate thumbnail image. 4) Save your map, share it by making it public, and provide the URL here. Note: It is recognized that your map is a “work in progress.” This is perfectly fine! You’ll have plenty of time in future weeks of this course to refine your map. But share it now so others can have a look at what you are up to and be inspired. Investigations in Spatial Thinking Course: Module 2: Population and Ecoregions. Page 11 of 12 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Module 2 Quiz 2 1) How is examining population density different from analyzing a choropleth map of world population by country? 2) In this module, I had you reflect upon your local neighborhood and describe its population density. Can you see how this might be a useful technique in your courses to invite students to make personal and local observations and then connect it to observing city-wide, regional, national, or international trends and characteristics? 3) What is 1 way in which the natural or physical environment influences population density? 4) Name 2 base maps that you can use in ArcGIS Online. 5) What is one function within ArcGIS Online that you used in this module that you could use in your classroom? In one sentence, name the function and how you plan to use it. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Investigations in Spatial Thinking Course: Module 2: Population and Ecoregions. Page 12 of 12