MapTEACH Banner Logo and link to home



Home :: About :: People :: Curriculum :: Resources :: GIS Maps :: Careers :: Jobs :: FAQ


Curriculum

Place Based Geospatial Education for Alaska
Teacher and Student Guide
Grades 6-12
2008

MapTEACH (Mapping Technology Experiences with Alaska’s Cultural Heritage) is an educational curriculum for middle and high school students designed to help them both (1) understand the physical and cultural features of their environment, and (2) use mapping technologies to enhance and portray that new understanding. As such, it emphasizes the integration of three focus areas: geoscience, local landscape knowledge, and geographic information science (GPS, GIS and remotely sensed imagery). MapTEACH gives Alaskan students the opportunity to make a connection between traditional ways of viewing the landscape, scientific ways of making observations about the landscape, and the process of using cutting-edge information technologies to gather and disseminate information about the landscape. At its core, this curriculum is place-based and interdisciplinary in nature, and seeks to connect students, teachers, community members and scientists in an exploration of the local landscape from multiple perspectives. Lessons are organized into the following sections for ease of use:

Links for downloading the individual sections are located below, following the individual section overviews. The curriculum can also be downloaded as a single file (~30MB): MapTEACH Curriculum

NOTE: All GIS Lessons and GPS Lesson 3 requires access to a computer running ESRI's ArcExplorer Java Edition for Education (AEJEE) Ver. 2.2, GPSBabel Ver. 1.3.4, Garmin's BaseCamp*, and the MapTEACH WGS84 Data set. To request a copy of these materials email Sidney Stephens at: sastephens@alaska.edu

Section 1: Place Names and Landmarks

These lessons seek to answer the question “How do you know where you are?” by grounding students in an appreciation of their own mental maps and then expanding this to include understanding and documentation of the place names and landscape knowledge of local experts. This work is based on the belief that there are many ways to “know” where you are and that each way of knowing contributes to our overall understanding of the landscape. Click here to download the lessons for this section: Section 1: Place Names and Landmarks

Section 2: Remote Sensing and Geology

These hands-on lessons introduce students to remotely sensed imagery by exploring local air photo imagery, stereo pair photographs and topographic maps and by using these maps and imagery to evaluate river erosion and change over time. These lessons are not only interesting and relevant in their own right, but provide a solid introduction to the imagery used in several of the GIS lessons. Click here to download the lessons for this section: Section 2: Remote Sensing and Geology

Section 3: Global Positioning System

These lessons guide students through the basic uses of handheld Global Positioning System (GPS) units by finding and placing geocaches, documenting waypoints, and downloading location information into a computer in order to create a map of a place or a journey. Click here to download the lessons for this section: Section 3: Global Positioning System

Section 4: Geographic Information Systems

These lessons enable students to use GIS mapping technology to enhance and portray their understanding of the world around them by: (1) exploring the fundamental concept that maps are made of layers of data and a computer allows us to stack these layers in many different ways; and (2) manipulating existing data layers and adding their own data to generate original maps of personal, cultural or scientific interest. Select the appropriate link below to download these exercises: Section 4: Geographic Information Systems (MAC)

Several of the lessons included in the MapTEACH curriculum involve making digital maps using GPS and other data collected locally by students. Satellite imagery can be a useful and informative base map layer upon which students can display their own data. It is not feasible for MapTEACH to be able to anticipate every possible area that any given student project would need satellite base map data for, therefore we have developed two procedures so teachers (or advanced students) can generate their own image layers for use in their local-area digital mapping projects. These procedures can be found in the Appendix. Click here to download the Technical Appendix A Ver. 3.1

We expect and hope that as you become more familiar with this curriculum, you will find new ways to use and adapt these lessons and make them your own. We hope you will share these adaptations with us and also let us know what we might do next to make this curriculum more responsive to your needs.


Errata and Replacement Lessons

Please review the Errata Read-Me document prior to using the curriculum. The following documents reflect changes made to the primary curriculum:

 * BaseCamp is a software program produced by Garmin. In order to obtain this software you must download it directly from Garmin's website.
** Draft versions of MapTEACH documents may contain errors. Please exercise appropriate caution when using.

Skip links bar.
Skip address and contacts.
MapTEACH began as a collaboration between the Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys, the University of Alaska Fairbanks,
and the Environmental Remote Sensing Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. It is now a central component of the
University of Alaska Geography Program (UAGP), K-12 education network.

This website is maintained at UAGP.
Website Questions: Nicole Dufour     Project Questions: Sidney Stephens

Logo link to University of Alaska Fairbanks    Logo link to Alaska Department of Geological and Geophysical Surveys    Logo link to U.S. Dept. of Education    Logo link to UA Geography    Logo link to School of Natural Resources and Agricultural Sciences    Logo link to National Science Foundation   

The The U.S. Department of Education and the National Science Foundation are federal agencies that support fundamental research and education.

Creative Commons License The MapTEACH web site, data, documents and associated information created by MapTEACH are
licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 United States License.

Last Updated April 25, 2011