{"id":598492,"date":"2023-06-27T19:59:13","date_gmt":"2023-06-28T02:59:13","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.esri.com\/about\/newsroom\/?post_type=arcnews&#038;p=598492"},"modified":"2023-06-22T17:44:41","modified_gmt":"2023-06-23T00:44:41","slug":"teaching-geospatial-technology-in-bite-size-culturally-relevant-nuggets","status":"publish","type":"arcnews","link":"https:\/\/www.esri.com\/about\/newsroom\/arcnews\/teaching-geospatial-technology-in-bite-size-culturally-relevant-nuggets","title":{"rendered":"Teaching Geospatial Technology in Bite-Size, Culturally Relevant Nuggets"},"author":5752,"featured_media":0,"menu_order":0,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"sync_status":"","episode_type":"","audio_file":"","castos_file_data":"","podmotor_file_id":"","cover_image":"","cover_image_id":"","duration":"","filesize":"","filesize_raw":"","date_recorded":"","explicit":"","block":"","itunes_episode_number":"","itunes_title":"","itunes_season_number":"","itunes_episode_type":"","_links_to":"","_links_to_target":""},"categories":[171,10382,11022],"tags":[475822,280172,241,961,165642],"arcnews_issues":[485612],"class_list":["post-598492","arcnews","type-arcnews","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-education","category-esri-technology","category-thought-leader","tag-geographic-approach","tag-geospatial","tag-gis","tag-spatial-analysis","tag-university","arcnews_issues-summer-2023","arcnews_sections-gis-people"],"acf":{"short_description":"UMass Global\u2019s Institute for Geospatial Education meets students where they are and breaks the learning process down into familiar steps.","pdf":{"host_remotely":false,"file":"","file_url":""},"flexible_content":[{"acf_fc_layout":"content","content":"Think about the last time you tried to learn something new. Perhaps you wanted to hike to the top of a mountain or start using artificial intelligence (AI) tools at work. Did you climb to the peak on your very first hike? Did you outsource your entire job to AI within the first hour? Probably not.\r\n\r\nYou likely approached your learning goal via smaller, more familiar steps. You probably went for a 30-minute nature walk first and built up to your all-day ascent gradually, until you had the aha moment when you knew exactly how much water, food, and training you would need to make it to the top of the mountain. To learn about the latest AI tools, you likely started by reading articles and talking to colleagues about various AI platforms, got free trials for a few of them and poked around, and then had the aha moment when you realized which one would work for you. Only then did you begin implementing AI into select workflows."},{"acf_fc_layout":"image","image":597042,"image_position":"left","orientation":"vertical","hyperlink":""},{"acf_fc_layout":"content","content":"When learning something new, it is helpful to start from a place of relative familiarity and break the learning process down into bite-size nuggets. This moves learners closer to that aha moment, when they recognize how their new knowledge can be applied to other contexts.\r\n\r\nAt the new Institute for Geospatial Education at the University of Massachusetts Global (UMass Global), that is how instructors educate students about geospatial technology. They meet students where they are\u2014culturally, socially, and geographically\u2014and hook into the knowledge and experience they already have before working to extend students\u2019 understanding of the technology to new heights and realms.\r\n<h2>Consider Culture<\/h2>\r\nCulture, according to anthropologists Lara Braff and Katie Nelson, is \u201ca set of beliefs, practices, and symbols that are learned and shared.\u201d Culture is the lens through which people observe, discover, and act. Anytime groups of people come together, they bring their different cultures with them. So culture is important to consider when teaching people how to use geospatial tools.\r\n\r\nLearning modules at UMass Global\u2019s Institute for Geospatial Education actively regard students\u2019 cultural and social norms and incorporate them into the learning process. The curriculum also includes real-world examples of how culture intersects with the use of geospatial tools in various contexts around the globe.\r\n\r\nFor instance, to help the Indigenous Martu people of Australia\u2019s Western Desert manage their land and water systems in a modern context, GIS had to be implemented in a way that complemented the community\u2019s cultural conceptions of space and place. As noted in <em>Resilient Communities Across Geographies<\/em>, edited by Dr. Sheila Lakshmi Steinberg and Steven Steinberg, the Martu\u2019s traditional way of life centers on knowledge systems that are built around geography\u2014and song and storytelling are key to keeping those knowledge systems intact. Thus, as researchers Sue Davenport and Peter Johnson discovered, GIS is best used in this context to preserve and enhance the cultural knowledge that the Martu already possess.\r\n\r\nTeaching people how to learn new tools involves understanding different cultural patterns. This is true within any organization, school, or business. The way a particular group conceptualizes space and place is directly tied to what that group values and focuses on in the learning process. Members of the group orient themselves to the topic and interpret teachings based on cultural values and norms, as well as what is familiar in their own local cultures."},{"acf_fc_layout":"image","image":597052,"image_position":"right","orientation":"horizontal","hyperlink":""},{"acf_fc_layout":"content","content":"<h2>Bite-Size Nuggets<\/h2>\r\nOne of UMass Global\u2019s goals is to provide people all over the world\u2014many of whom have previously lacked access to education\u2014with the opportunity to learn GIS in an applied environment. A big focus of that objective is to ensure that they are able to learn the technology through bite-size, culturally relevant nuggets.\r\n\r\nTo do this, UMass Global is collaborating with Esri to break learning down into specific ideas or facts\u2014nuggets\u2014that can be taught in a few minutes to an hour. Students can then take the key concepts that they learn and build toward earning microcredentials, certificates, and degrees. UMass Global incorporates ArcGIS technology, materials from Esri Academy, <em>ArcGIS Blog<\/em> posts, and more to teach students how to use GIS in ways that positively impact leadership, communication, strategic thinking, and decision-making.\r\n\r\nThrough conversations with interdisciplinary geospatial leaders, including members of the Institute for Geospatial Education\u2019s advisory board, instructors have created a big-picture view of the geospatial skills that students need to acquire. These include not only technical experience but also soft skills that are critical to achieving success. Students stack learning units on top of one another to amplify their existing competencies and create a new line of knowledge within their disciplines. This helps learners discover how to use geospatial tools in business, for emergency management and economic development, in concert with other technology such as AI, and in a host of other situations.\r\n\r\nUMass Global teaches the Geographic Approach, a methodology that encourages learners to ask location-based questions; acquire, examine, and analyze data; and act on the results. This method ensures that the goal of using geospatial technology is to encourage action, aid with problem-solving, and influence policymaking. Because what good is studying a technology or challenge if it doesn\u2019t lead to progress?\r\n\r\nAs Esri director of product engineering and Institute for Geospatial Education advisory board member Clint Brown said about the program, \u201cYou rapidly become part of an ever expanding group of problem-solvers capable of addressing the big challenges that face our planet.\u201d\r\n\r\nEsri education manager Michael Gould, an affiliate of the institute, echoed that sentiment."},{"acf_fc_layout":"image","image":597062,"image_position":"left","orientation":"vertical","hyperlink":""},{"acf_fc_layout":"content","content":"\u201cOrganizations are looking for more than people who know what GIS is,\u201d he said. \u201cThey are looking for decision-makers who are capable of using geospatial thinking for problem-solving.\u201d\r\n<h2>The Aha Moment<\/h2>\r\nMeeting students where they are acknowledges their lived experiences as well as their existing knowledge and skills. It creates a framework for engagement and provides learners with a launchpad for success, whatever their backgrounds may be.\r\n\r\nPackaging instruction into bite-size nuggets increases the accessibility of education and improves learners\u2019 confidence that they can achieve their goals. This is because of assimilation, a process wherein people integrate new learning with knowledge they already have. When students acquire new skills by participating in authentic problem-solving via a culturally familiar frame of reference, they are more likely to retain that knowledge and apply it in novel contexts.\r\n\r\nTeaching GIS this way crosses global geographies. As students acquire more skills, the problems they are asked to solve become more complex and occur in different environments. And along the way, they receive recognition\u2014in the form of microcredentials\u2014of their growing skill sets. This motivates students to keep learning and ties credentials to competencies, which gives employers confidence that potential employees do indeed have the skills they claim to have.\r\n\r\nMany people around the world can learn how to use GIS by first applying the technology in small ways to issues that they already understand. Once they achieve that aha moment, they can take their skills and start on the path to tackling more complex problems."}],"references":null},"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v25.9 (Yoast SEO v25.9) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Teaching Geospatial Technology in Bite-Size, Culturally Relevant Nuggets | Summer 2023 | ArcNews<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"UMass Global\u2019s Institute for Geospatial Education meets students where they are and breaks the learning process down into familiar steps.\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.esri.com\/about\/newsroom\/arcnews\/teaching-geospatial-technology-in-bite-size-culturally-relevant-nuggets\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta 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