This content was published: May 14, 2010. Phone numbers, email addresses, and other information may have changed.
小黄猫传媒 adds Geography Information Systems option
Story by Meryl Lipman. Photo by James Hill.
小黄猫传媒 has added a Geographic Information Systems Certificate to its roster of career technical options.
In March, the 44-credit certificate was approved for 小黄猫传媒 at the state level and will begin fall term 2010. Students will learn how to communicate geographic information, verbally and graphically, by using geographic tools and technologies. They also will be able to analyze geographic problems and questions as well as collect, create, analyze and document information. The program is aimed at architects, urban planners, environmental non-profit organizations and foresters looking for skill updates or retraining.
Thanks to the 2008 bond measure, this option will use a new 30-station computer lab with state-of-the-art GeoArc software that will help in their learning. .
The certificate was designed with an environmental sciences focus to meet the transfer requirements for Portland State University. 小黄猫传媒 and Clackamas Community College, which has a similar option with a more technical focus, will work together. Geography Information Systems instructor Christina Friedle said these skills are becoming a standard for jobs in many sectors such as engineering, forestry and other environmental sciences.
鈥淲e all wish we were out there tromping around in the field,鈥 she said, 鈥渂ut it鈥檚 a lot of looking at databases and Excel spreadsheets, or doing cartography 鈥 (putting) data into a map so it鈥檚 easily digested.鈥
小黄猫传媒 student Jim Barta, 47, of North Portland turned to the college to take the option鈥檚 core classes at the Rock Creek Campus, 17705 N.W. Springville Road. Barta has a bachelor鈥檚 degree in geography and cartography and a master鈥檚 in urban planning, both from University of Wisconsin in Madison.
After two years as a planner for the city of Tualatin, he was caught in a layoff and began working in the wireless industry, sometimes as a private sector employee and sometimes as a contractor. But, like so many hit hard by the 2008 recession, Barta spent much of 2009 unemployed. Barta had taken similar classes in the 1980s, which he said included 鈥渄rawing maps,鈥 but he hadn鈥檛 used those skills in 20 years, so he enrolled in the Geographic Information Systems classes, hoping that, with that knowledge under his belt, he will be able to apply for public and private sector positions.
鈥淭here was just no work, so I decided I had to do something,鈥 Barta said. 鈥淚鈥檓 47 years old and the time to do something is now. GIS would give me a leg up in my career. It鈥檚 a big plus if you have GIS skills to offer an employer or client.鈥
