Part 1
Welcome & introductions, quick spatial orientation (that is, where are the bathrooms?)
Game plan for the summer
- When are we meeting? What to do in between?
- What are the deliverables?
- (Do we need to spend time on WHY you might want to teach with maps & data?)
Quick tour of the technology
- Your technological friends: ArcGIS Online, Story Maps
- Your technological acquaintances: Collector app, Community Analyst tool. (We'll see these but probably won't go hands-on with them)
- And can everyone get logged into their own technological home base?
- b21.maps.arcgis.com
- canes.maps.arcgis.com
- kutztown.maps.arcgis.com
- (and if none of those work for you, use a personal account – sign up for one here: https://www.esri.com/en-us/arcgis/products/create-account)
Quick tour of Esri's GeoInquiries–if this is your first time with this stuff, it's a good place to start!
- What are GeoInquiries? "[S]hort, standards-based inquiry activities for teaching map-based content found in commonly used textbooks. Each activity is designed using a common inquiry model and can be presented quickly from a single computer and projector or modified for students’ hands-on engagement. Collections of 15-20 activities per topic complement your curriculum throughout the year."
- See the full menu of GeoInquiries, or see...
- Selected GeoInquiry: Climate change
And an example of a teacher-created map and dataset, using US geography
- Dataset #1: 13 colonies
- Dataset #2: states 14-26
- Map of all 50 states
Part 2: You go hands-on!
So who wants to make a map?? Let's do this!!
- First, let's annotate a map, via 'Map Notes'. Make a map that shows 'Your Happy Place' – add a placemark, add a polygon, add a line, add a label (text)
- Save your map!
- If you wish, share your map
- Here's an editable Google Doc in which you can post your map URL
- Next, add someone else's data: Add > Search for Layers > ArcGIS Online
- Finally, add some custom data: Download this spreadsheet and then Add > Add Layer from File
Part 3: Some examples and then we split into groups
Let's look at some materials created by teachers
- Founding Fathers of Psychology – all map annotations (Map Notes) to show content in spatial context
- Founding Fathers of Psychology (same map) built into a Story Map.
- Urban Heat Islands – map fed by data collection
- Built Environment investigation – Story Map that contains Story Maps
- Voter Turnout Story Map – Integrates maps AND images; see also the 'Investigation sheet' for guiding (and capturing) student work on this map.
Based on what you've seen, what do you want to do next?
- "I need to review the basic how-tos"
- "I am ready to start building maps!"
- "I want to start building a Story Map!"
- ("I want to build a map that gets fed by students' data collection!")
Part 4: Wrapping up and getting organized for the next steps
- Re-state intros! And briefly describe what you worked on for the past hour
- Find a working partner (or two)
- Preview the online materials to explore before the July session(s) and fill out the exit form.
See you in July!