GIS user technology news

News, Business, AI, Technology, IOS, Android, Google, Mobile, GIS, Crypto Currency, Economics

  • Advertising & Sponsored Posts
    • Advertising & Sponsored Posts
    • Submit Press
  • PRESS
    • Submit PR
    • Top Press
    • Business
    • Software
    • Hardware
    • UAV News
    • Mobile Technology
  • FEATURES
    • Around the Web
    • Social Media Features
    • EXPERTS & Guests
    • Tips
    • Infographics
  • Blog
  • Events
  • Shop
  • Tradepubs
  • CAREERS
You are here: Home / *BLOG / Around the Web / Changing the Face of Undergraduate Geospatial Education

Changing the Face of Undergraduate Geospatial Education

December 12, 2017 By GISuser

The majority of collegiate degree programs treat geospatial technologies as a set of bolt-on courses to traditional underlying geography, ecology, or computer information systems core program of study. This approach was reasonable five or more years ago when the full swath of geospatial technologies was not as full as it is now. However, advents in GIS, remote sensing, positioning, geo-data management, geo-visualization, and geospatial analysis have become robustly populated and now comprise a base wide and deep enough to warrant recognition of geospatial technologies as an academic discipline.

Delta State University

Pedagogy stresses that a higher education should advance from a broad base to highly specialized knowledge, skills, and abilities. To meet the demands of a growing student population interested in spatial technologies, the Center for Interdisciplinary Geospatial Information Technologies at Delta State University assessed emerging trends in workforce needs, geospatial certification programs, and the depth of knowledge required to complete competitive graduate programs in spatial technologies. Results from this assessment strongly suggested that the time had come to formulate a Bachelor of Applied Science in Geospatial Analysis and Intelligence degree program (BAS-GAI).

The BAS-GAI is designed to provide graduates with a well-rounded geospatial technologies education that is still rooted firmly in geography. Building on a traditional liberal arts base, the program requires students to complete 53 semester hours of core geospatial training which includes positioning, remote sensing, GIS, geo-analytics and geo-statistics, programming and 15 semester hours of geography and advanced geospatial technologies electives. Students are also required to complete at least one full semester of internship or capstone project work in association with an industry partner. Students completing this program will meet the educational requirements needed to sit for their journeyman surveyor exam, the US Geospatial Intelligence Foundation’s Certified Geospatial Professional exam series, and the GIS Certification Institute exam.

The resulting program of study has quickly gained attention and acclaim. It was the basis for the DSU being recognized as a Center of Academic Excellence by the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency and the US Marine Corps has recently developed a partnership whereby enlisted GEOINT Marines may earn their undergraduate degrees. DSU offers the program both fully online and as a blended online/on-campus program of study, waives all out-of-state tuition for online students, and offers financial aid and student employment opportunities to competitive prospective students.

For more information about this program or to apply, please visit http://gis.deltastate.edu

Author: Talbot Brooks, Director, Center for Interdisciplinary Geospatial Information Technologies at Delta State University

Talbot Brooks has served as the Director of the Center for Interdisciplinary Geospatial Information Technologies at Delta State University since 2005. In this capacity, he acts as the department chair, reporting directly to the Dean, College of Arts and Sciences. Mr. Brooks teaches at the undergraduate and graduate levels, conducts sponsored research and development activities, performs service to the University and profession, and administers all aspects of the Center. Moreover, Mr. Brooks is responsible for the creation of geospatially-oriented academic and training programs.

talbot brooks

Filed Under: Around the Web, EDU, EXPERTS, Top Press, Top Text Lead Story Tagged With: EDU, Education

Editor’s Picks

ArcGIS Online Updates Include Smart Mapping and More

Mobile Data Collection with FulcrumApp and Moving into CartoDB

A New, Official Arkansas GIS Web Portal

Wider Selection of US Topo Maps From USGS Now Available in Avenza’s PDF Maps App

See More Editor's Picks...

Recent Industry News

Aerial Surveys Int’l and Global Marketing Insights to Present GEOINT 2026 Workshop on Multi-Domain Geospatial Fusion for Automated Infrastructure Monitoring

April 24, 2026 By GISuser

Why Timing Matters More Than You Think With Spray Seal (And Why People Often Get It Slightly Wrong)

April 22, 2026 By GISuser

The Quiet Planning Stage Most People Don’t See When Building a Pool in Brisbane

April 22, 2026 By GISuser

Best Equipment Labels for Industrial Use: Ranked Systems That Survive Real-World Conditions

April 17, 2026 By GISuser

Hot News

State of Data Science Report – AI and Open Source at Work

HERE and AWS Collaborate on New HERE AI Mapping Solutions

Virtual Surveyor Adds Productivity Tools to Mid-Level Smart Drone Surveying Software Plan

Categories

Copyright gletham Communications 2015 - 2026

Go to mobile version