University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee  
Geographic Information Sciences (GIS)  
 
 
This website describes GIS facilities, research, faculty and
education at the University
of Wisconsin - Milwaukee,
Wisconsin's urban university
 
 
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GIS at UWM
  bullet Multidisciplinary
Connections
  bullet Affiliations
  bullet GIS Day 2009
  bullet GIS Student Project
Competition 2009

(pdf flyer)
  bullet Previous GIS Student Project
Competition Winners

(including links to winning papers)
  bullet "gis" and "gis-jobs" listservs
  bullet GIS Day 2008
  bullet GIS Illustrations
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Resources to Learn
ArcGIS

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GIS Club
GIS Club (pdf flyer)

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ASPRS Student Chapter


Research and
Related Activities
  bullet Related Initiatives
  bullet Databases

Teaching and
Curriculum
  bullet GIS Courses
  bullet GIS Programs
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Library Holdings
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Certificate Recipients

Laboratories and

Facilities

People/Staff
Resources


Other

  bullet
WebGIS Support
Agreement

 


Online Forms

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GIS Certificate
Application
Form
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Verification of GIS
Certificate Completion
Form
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Web GIS Account
Request Form

 


GIS Council Minutes

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25 June 2009
Draft
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28 May 2009
GIS Certificate Committee
Draft
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7 Apr 2009
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4 Mar 2009
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3 Feb 2009
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14 Oct 2008
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17 Sept 2008
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24 June 2008
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28 May 2008
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30 April 2008
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2 April 2008
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20 Feb 2008
 
 
     
     

GIS at UWM

Since 1988, the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee (UWM) has experienced a rapidly increasing interest in geographic information systems (GIS) from existing aUWM Campus: 2007nd prospective students, faculty from many different disciplines, and a number of outside public and private organizations. In that year, two GIS courses were introduced to graduate and undergraduate students from various academic programs at the University. As time went on and more courses were added, more faculty and students became aware of the vast potential that GIS technology offered in so many different disciplines.

Each year, as word about the program spreads, new students are attracted to the GIS-related education and research facilities at the University. Increasingly, organizations in the public, private, and non-profit sectors are expressing interest in the University's capabilities related to GIS technology. This interest, combined with the availability of authentic local government data from the City of Milwaukee and other sources (such as the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency), have worked to create a powerful educational, research, and urban service capacity for the University.

UWM has established itself internationally as an urban-based, multi-disciplinary geographic information systems institution that utilizes GIS technology and unique government data in the education of future professionals in a variety of disciplines, prepares students for a GIS-related career, and conducts research and provides GIS-related services to an urban and regional community for addressing current public and private sector information needs.


UWM GIS in the news


bullet Mann awarded Damon Anderson Memorial Scholarship by WLIA

Melissa Mann, a GIS Certificate recipient in 2008 currently working towards a Masters degree in Urban Affairs, has been awarded one of four scholarships in 2009.

The Wisconsin Land Information Association (WLIA) Melissa_Mannestablished the Damon Anderson Memorial Scholarship Fund to help students working toward a degree related to land information (such as geographic information systems, geography, and urban planning). This scholarship is funded through donations to the fund from private individuals, organizations, and other funding activities of WLIA. Four scholarships in the amount of $1,000 each will be distributed by the WLIA Board of Directors in 2009. The scholarship will also include a one year student membership and free registration to the WLIA 2010 Annual Conference.
081109


bullet Mockert and "Making the Case for GIS Coordination" featured at GIS Day Luncheon

Another successful GIS Day is behind us. Several hundred students, staff, area professionals, and guests attended our event. Activities this year included a map gallery, vendor demonstrations, and hands-on workshops.

The highlight of our event was Mr. Mockert's presentation, (available here) which focused on the importance of Geographic Information (GI) coordination, addressing three topic areas:

  • developing a statewide GI governance body (a geographic information coordination council) in Wisconsin;
  • the importance of coordination across jurisdictions at all levels as the world moves into the "New Web 2.0";
  • and how to truly leverage the collective investments in GIS in this new environment of readily available and massive amounts of information.

Link to Mr. Mockert's PowerPoint presentation.
112707


bullet GIS Certificates Awarded

Among the students receiving the GIS Certificate in 2008-09 are Matt Robinson, Melissa Mann, Mike Kumbera, Sam Hildebrand, and Artency Davis. They are pictured here with Professor Bill Huxhold at the annual "GIS Chili" celebration.

2008 GIS Certificate recipients

Other students completing the GIS Certificate Program this academic year are Lee Frederick, Ricky Kubicek, Charlie Leonard, Sean Meehan, Carlos Orozco, and Kenny Aderungboye. GIS Certificate recipients now number 108 since the first certificates were awarded in 1993.

You can read more about UWM GIS Certificate Recipients here.
052808


bullet Professional, student-led GIS Club established at UWM

GIS Club 2006-07
Founding members Brian Thayer, Kyle Noll, Rama Mohapatra, and Greg Rybarczyk have been successful in creating a new student organization "which would help unite anyone enrolled at UWM who shares a common interest in pursuing GIS as a career."

The club's first item of business is to create some flyers to distribute during GIS Day and take a leadership role in providing lab assistance to the nine workshops taking place that day. They have also made arrangements to have a table set up during the vendor demonstrations where a poster will highlight the multidisciplinary nature of GIS. It is hoped this approach will help generate interest among students who have not been exposed to some of the potential applications of the technology. Brian goes on to say, "We hope the [membership] list grows considerably in the coming months."

Membership forms and flyers will be available at GIS Day.
103106



 
bullet UWM Urban Planning Department receives
ESRI Special Achievement in GIS Award


ESRI Special Achievement in GIS Award
At its annual User Conference in San Diego this past July (2005), the Environmental Systems Research Institute (ESRI) named UWM’s Department of Urban Planning as a recipient of its Special Achievement in GIS (SAG) award. The SAG award ceremony was held on July 27 at the San Diego convention center and presided over by Jack Dangermond, the president and founder of ESRI.

The SAG awards are given annually to organizations who have exhibited exemplary use of ESRI’s geographic information systems software, ArcGIS. Their web site describes SAG awardees

“By embracing GIS technology, these organizations have made extraordinary contributions to our global society and set new precedents throughout the GIS community.”

Recipients of the Special Achievement in GIS award are submitted by ESRI staff from thousands of organizations worldwide, then personally reviewed and selected by Jack Dangermond. Here is what ESRI said about the UWM GIS program in Urban Planning:

“The Department's interests and activities span a broad range of topics, including: GIS in transportation, public participation GIS, and building local capacity in developing nations. The faculty are highly published and have been leading participants in URISA, UCGIS and the Wisconsin Land Information Association. In addition, they are involved in programs to bring GIS skills to at-risk students in local school districts. Their work with local transit agencies and local units of government to develop a multi-modal internet trip planning capability to has helped economically challenged individuals find ways to get to places of potential employment. The Department has a strong GIS-oriented faculty that has been and continues to be at the forefront of education, outreach and research. “

Receiving the award in San Diego were Professor William Huxhold and Adjunct Associate Professor Eric Fowler. Pictured below are Nick Fisher (former GIS student), Huxhold, Dangermond, Fowler, and Ann Johnson (ESRI Education Manager.)
07xx05


News & Events


18 Nov 2009
 

GIS Day

  Location: AGSL and Conference Center,
Golda Meir Library,
University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

10 Dec 2009
 

GITA WI Chapter
Annual Membership Appreciation Dinner

RSVP Thomas Tym
(262) 542-5734, Ext 3002

  Location:
Weissgerber's Golden Mast
Okauchee, WI

 

Upcoming National & Regional Events



20 Nov 2009
Madison, WI

 

GIS Day Expo
UW-Madison


4-5 Feb 2010
Washington, DC

 

UCGIS Winter Meeting


24-26 Feb 2010
Appleton, WI

 

WLIA Annual Conference


14-18 Apr 2010
Washington, DC

 

AAG



15-16 Jun 2010
Hilton Head Island, SC

 

UCGIS Summer Assembly
Focus on GIScience education




12-16 Jul 2010
San Diego, CA

 

ESRI UC


24-28 2010
Phoenix, AZ

 

ACSM/ASPRS/GITA



 


bullet ASPRS Student Chapter
to form at UWM

The mission of the American Society for Photogrammetry & Remote Sensing (ASPRS) is to advance knowledge and improve understanding of mapping sciences and to promote the responsible applications of photogrammetry, remote sensing, geographic information systems (GIS), and supporting technologies.

This chapter will be part of the Western Great Lakes Region (WGL) of the ASPRS. The only other student chapter in this region is at Indiana State University. As a member you could enjoy many benefits including eligibility for National and Regional awards, scholarships and fellowships totalling $30,000.

There are a few requirements to join this group: you must be a UWM student, pay a forty-five dollar fee, and have an interest in Remote Sensing and/or GIS. The chapter is looking for more interested students to join and is hoping to get the chapter up and running by this summer.

Please look at the ASPRS website for more details or contact Andy Tillman with specific questions.
0409


bulletHassman Reports from ESRI UC

As one of sixty students awarded a student assistantship to attend the ESRI’s International User Conference this August, Monique Hassman, 2008 ESRI UCit was truly an experience of a lifetime. Being part of a collective effort for an event hosting 14,000+ attendees from all around the world, engaged in an array of GIS endeavors was challenging, yet incredibly rewarding. I am an anthropology student who is completing a GIS certificate. It was from another GIS certificate student who participated in the program last year that I learned of this program and was encouraged to apply. Partaking in this opportunity has lead to making new friends and networking relationships within the GIS community that will, I trust, continue long after the conference.

The other students involved in the assistantship program came together from all across the United States, Europe, Africa, and the Caribbean. Although individual students came from vast distances, it did not take much time for us to connect with one another. We came from a variety of academic disciplines, this provided opportunities for us to exchange ideas and learn from one another. Each day, the organizers arranged for the students to be involved in a variety of work activities supporting the conference which included registration, the map gallery, and workshops. Equally as important, the organizers provided opportunities to attend sessions, network, explore San Diego, host a pool party, and even arranged for nights to dance the evening away. Cumulatively, these engagements produced a weeklong positive atmosphere and productive experience.

Throughout my participation in the program and attendance at this conference, GIS became even more dynamic than previously understood. Conversations over the week with participating students, technicians, and professionals allowed for my knowledge of GIS capacity to develop and expand. This conference exhibits the ability of GIS to be applied to almost any activity and for this reason; it has much to offer anyone with a hint of curiosity.

Monique
0808


bullet Ottman reports from NASA

I am working on a joint project between the National Park Service and the Ecological Forecasting Lab here at NASA. The Ecological Forecasting Lab uses MODIS sensor's LAI (Leaf Area Index) product as an input to their TOPS (Terrestrial Observation and Prediction System) Model. The TOPS model provides ecological fore-casts and now-casts for park managers. Even though there has been extensive validation on the MODIS sensor, by large teams of scientists with months of field work, the NPS wants to further increase their confidence in the MODIS LAI product over Yosemite's steep topography and heterogeneous landscape.

Our team conducted two weeks of field work in Yosemite. DustyOttman07We laid out a sampling grids representative of 25, 28m resolution Landsat pixels. We sampled data using Digital Hemispheric Photography and the LAI-2000, both corrected for vegetation clumping in coniferous tree stands with

We are using a 2007 Landsat image to produce a Reduced Simple Ratio vegetation index map of Yosemite. That RSR image will be run through a regression analysis with LAI ground-measurements to produce a ground-truthed LAI map of Yosemite that will be re-sampled to 1km MODIS resolution. The ground-truthed LAI map and the MODIS LAI product map will be compared. We are still processing our data.

In the next two weeks, I have to fly down to Langley, VA to give a presentation on this to the director of Earth Sciences at NASA. Little more intense than Geog 600… =)

Dusty
080307


bullet Mike Kumbera's article in ArcNews

In MUP and Certificate studentKumberaGISsnapshot Mike Kumbera's article in the Winter 2006/2007 issue of ARCNEWS, Symbiont and the City of Milwaukee were recognized for innovative use of geographic information system (GIS) and global positioning system (GPS) technologies as part of a remedial excavation project performed by Symbiont at a brownfields property located in Milwaukee. ARCNEWS is published quarterly by the Environmental Systems Research Institute (ESRI), and is the largest GIS publication in the world, with an estimated global readership of more than 600,000 professionals.

Mike says his internship project "was a brownfield site in Milwaukee that needed to be excavated to be in compliance with residential soil standards. We used a GPS to collect topographic data on the site as well as manage the depths of the excavation. We used GIS to manage the GPS data collected on site, identify coordinates to stake-out the excavation areas, perform cut/fill's to calculate "

Link to Online Article---
http://www.esri.com/news/arcnews/winter0607articles/maintaining-accurate.cfm
031207


 

 

 


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