Friday, August 7, 2009

Back On The Geoweb Bandwagon

I am officially on the Geoweb bandwagon! I think this is the third time I have declared this in recent years, admittedly a bit premature in my previous attempts but I'm all in this time. The Geoweb has finally come of age. To give you some context, I have been a part-time instructor for several years now, teaching a number of GIS courses in the Master of Engineering Program (GIS) at the University of Colorado @ Denver. My favorite course over the years has been my web GIS course. While the most challenging given the ever changing landscape in this area, it is where my interest lies. The problem has been, what the heck do I call this course.

I have been following the Geoweb09 activities this year remotely and have had the opportunity to attend a couple of times, even dating back to its previous form, GML days. The term "Geoweb" and its numerous incarnations (Geospatial Web) have been bantered about for a few years, mostly in the context of this gathering. A couple of years ago, I actually called my course "Introduction to the Geoweb" but struggled with the label given the immaturity of the platform. Web2.0 stuff was just kicking in and my perception until recently was that the Geoweb was nothing more than some neogeos throwing up markers on a Google Map with little or no appreciation, knowledge, etc. of traditional (and very important) GIS concepts such as spatial relationships (topologies), projections, spatial analysis, etc. In addition, given my old-school roots in GIS, not having "GIS" in the course title was like having a marg without Grand Marnier--it worked and it was still decent but just wasn't right. Needless to say, I backtracked. So over the next couple of years, my labels for the course included "Introduction to Distributed GIS" and "Introduction to Internet GIS."

Those days are over now. The course is now officially recalled "Introduction to The Geoweb." This corny personal journey mimics that maturation process of the Geoweb itself. We all knew it was there and wanted to embrace it, but a few chips had to fall before we could really do so. The Geoweb is now walking. In fact, it is more like a toddler who can really move but who is a bit unpredictable.

I have been researching a number of great materials related to the Geoweb, much of which has been coming out of the Geoweb conference, and other materials which have been around for awhile. Based on these sources, I hope to develop a comprehensive look at the Geoweb that I will be sharing this semester with my students. I also plan to post these materials for some "crowd sourced lecture development" (if there is such a thing) as well so stay tuned.

2 comments:

Hussein Nasser said...

Excellent!

How can we enroll to this course?

Map Vibe (Gregory L. Gunther) said...

Hello Hussein,

Good to hear from you. The program is offered through University of Colorado at Denver. Contact Lynn Johnson, Program Coordinator (lynn.johnson@ucdenver.edu) for details. It is fully online so can be attended by anyone, anywhere.