Photo by Kelly Sullivan/ Peninsula Clarion (Left) Ninth graders Brittany Taylor and Sam Skolnick discuss map layers in Nathan Erfruth's geography class during the two-day course in Geographical Information System taught by members of the Kenai Peninsula GIS User Group Friday, Sept. 25, 2015, at Soldotna Prep in Soldotna, Alaska.

Photo by Kelly Sullivan/ Peninsula Clarion (Left) Ninth graders Brittany Taylor and Sam Skolnick discuss map layers in Nathan Erfruth's geography class during the two-day course in Geographical Information System taught by members of the Kenai Peninsula GIS User Group Friday, Sept. 25, 2015, at Soldotna Prep in Soldotna, Alaska.

GIS offers new ways to look at the world

  • By Kelly Sullivan
  • Sunday, October 4, 2015 4:14pm
  • News

From tracking infectious diseases worldwide, to regional elephant migration patterns, students are learning about the many layers of Geographic Information Systems, or GIS, for the first time in local classrooms.

Soldotna Prep geography teacher Nathan Erfurth opened his doors on Sept. 24 and Sept. 25, to four professionals from the Kenai Peninsula GIS User Group for a crash course in the virtually limitless applications of spatial analysis.

“(My students) desperately need this knowledge because they can’t have informed conversations about current events and about decisions that we make globally or locally without knowing where they are happening,” Erfurth said. “That’s why my class is focused and centered on current events and well, as you know, maps. ”

Erfurth, who has a particular affection for teaching international relationships, referred to the content of the course as the instruction of the “sheer amount of data and power,” that is accessible to anyone who knows how to use it.

Understanding how to use that available data through online mapping materials is becoming easier and easier, said Kenai Peninsula Borough GIS Specialist Bobbi Lay, who co-organized and co-taught the lessons.

“Anyone with a web browser can crunch data,” Lay said.

Layers and layers, or the representations of spatial or geographical datasets, are housed online.

To combine and analyze those layers is “to drill down through the sandwich to see how all those relate,” Lay said. Many modern job positions requires some knowledge of GIS, she said.

The user group utilized pre-designed courses produced by the GIS company Esri, which has weeks’ worth of work for kindergarten through twelfth-grade classrooms.

Lay was first introduced to the services during a national conference in 2015. No software or special equipment is required to use it, just access to the Internet, she said.

The City of Soldotna’s Economic Development Director Stephanie Queen, Planning Technician Austin Johnson and Kenai Watershed Forum GIS Specialist Branden Bornemann developed the lesson plan along with Lay.

The first-time teachers taught a lesson called Running Hot and Cold to four of Erfurth’s classes for two days, filling the first with an answer to the question “what is GIS?”, the history of maps from way finding to ship navigation, to global satellite imagery and the second with analysis on global climates, its populations and how the two relate.

Student Trinity Palm said she now understands GIS to be the study of communities and their environments.

It was the first time Kyla Smith and her classmate Kayln McGillibroy had ever evaluated online map layers. McGillibroy said the most relevant and immediate application she identified with the new data is improving travel plans.

Now, she said, she can seek out vacation locations with ideal populations and temperatures.

In the future, McGillibroy said she would like to learn more about the various programs, and software used with GIS.

Smith said she picked up the concepts quickly because the lessons were well taught.

“Instead of spreading out maps, you can just press buttons and it will show you what you want,” Smith said.

Choosing where to open a new business, disaster preparedness or even for Erfurth’s students, their upcoming Caring for the Kenai projects can benefit from using elements of GIS, he said. Instead of selecting a general area to develop a trail locally, for example, a student could outline in the exact location, length and potential environmental impacts where a path could be installed, he said.

Lay said students in school now are already primed for much of the content that could be taught about GIS.

“They are the first generation that has a GPS in their pockets,” Lay said.

Reach Kelly Sullivan at kelly.sullivan@peninsulaclarion.com

Photo by Kelly Sullivan/ Peninsula Clarion Kenai Watershed Forum GIS Specialist Branden Bornemann assists Nathan Erfruth's geography student India Bates during the two-day course in Geographical Information System taught by members of the Kenai Peninsula GIS User Group Friday, Sept. 25, 2015, at Soldotna Prep in Soldotna, Alaska.

Photo by Kelly Sullivan/ Peninsula Clarion Kenai Watershed Forum GIS Specialist Branden Bornemann assists Nathan Erfruth’s geography student India Bates during the two-day course in Geographical Information System taught by members of the Kenai Peninsula GIS User Group Friday, Sept. 25, 2015, at Soldotna Prep in Soldotna, Alaska.

More in News

Alaska State Troopers logo.
Soldotna resident arrested for possession of child pornography

He was arrested “without incident” and taken to Wildwood Pretrial Facility with bail set at $7,000

The Soldotna Public Library is seen on Saturday, Dec. 4, 2021. (Camille Botello/Peninsula Clarion)
Soldotna library board updates facility use policy

The changes are the first modifications to the policy in more than a year and took effect April 15

Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion
Students of Soldotna Montessori Charter School comb for trash along the banks of the Kenai River at Centennial Park in Soldotna on Thursday.
‘This is their playground’

KPBSD students join fishing groups to pick up trash along Kenai River

Senate President Gary Stevens, a Kodiak Republican, confers with other senators and legislative staff moments before gavelling in the start of this year’s legislative session at the Alaska State Capitol on Tuesday, Jan. 16, 2024. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Senate’s draft operating budget includes outstanding KPBSD pandemic relief funds

Public education advocates, students and staff have doggedly lobbied lawmakers for an increase to the state’s K-12 funding formula

Rep. Justin Ruffridge, R-Soldotna, speaks in support of debating an omnibus education bill in the Alaska House Chambers on Monday, Feb. 19, 2024, in Juneau, Alaska. (Ashlyn O’Hara/Peninsula Clarion)
Ruffridge discusses allotment program for correspondence students at virtual town hall

The fate of the program is in limbo following a superior court ruling handed down last month

Student Representative Maggie Grenier speaks during a meeting of the Kenai Peninsula Borough School District School Board in Soldotna, Alaska, on Monday, April 1, 2024. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Assembly ordinance would designate meeting time for student councils

The ordinance is sponsored by Assembly Vice President Tyson Cox and assembly member Ryan Tunseth

Construction equipment can be seen at the site of the “Future Home of Triumvirate Theatre” in Kenai, Alaska, on Wednesday, May 1, 2024. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Construction starts on new Triumvirate Theatre

The start of construction came “1,162 days” after the fire that destroyed the Triumvirate’s former location

The badge for the Kenai Police Department
Kenai resident arrested for unlawful exploitation of a minor

The man is charged with unlawful exploitation of a minor, enticement of a minor and third-degree misconduct involving a controlled substance

Ben Weagraff from Kenai River Brewing Company works the beer garden at Soldotna Creek Park during the Levitt AMP Soldotna Music Series on Wednesday, June 12, 2019. (Photo by Brian Mazurek/Peninsula Clarion)
State board OKs Soldotna request for more restaurant alcohol licenses

Twenty more restaurants in Soldotna will be able to serve alcohol following… Continue reading

Most Read