During a workshop I attended at the
Esri User Conference this past summer, my colleague
Charlie Frye stated that “a good map teaches you to ask a better question.” I love this statement. It fits well with the mission of the GIS education community, don’t you think? Isn’t one of our main goals in teaching and learning with GIS to use maps and data to investigate our communities, our regions, our countries, and our world? A question is the first step in an investigation. It is the first step in
the geographic inquiry process. Whether the question is “What is the relationship between birth rate and life expectancy around the globe?” or “How did the construction of the breakwater change the rate of coastal erosion along this stretch of beach?” or “Why were communities along the path of Superstorm Sandy affected differently?”, these questions form the foundation of our investigations. Good questions inevitably get refined and modified along the way and usually lead to other questions. They may not be fully answered, and oftentimes have no single correct answer. This may be puzzling at first to students but emulates real-world decision-making.
In this activity, students determine the optimal route for a tourist bus through Manhattan given specified points of interest and the location of the tour bus garage.
As important as good questions are, it is sometimes amazing how little time we spend in our educational system helping students practice asking good questions. Perhaps it is because in this age of standardized testing, we are so focused on good answers. Yet many educators are indeed helping students ask questions, and not just any questions, but thoughtful questions that can lead to increased understanding, skill building, and critical thinking.
Teaching with GIS and teaching about GIS foster good questioning. One of the core functions of a GIS is to allow for real-world issues to be examined, questioned, and probed with real data. Maps in a GIS environment allow for the many spatial and temporal dimensions of our world to be examined, at multiple scales. Not only are the questions able to be grappled with using rich sets of maps and data, but they are tied to real-world events past and present. They are interesting, but they are also important and relevant for our future, including such issues as sustainable agriculture, natural hazard management, smart city planning, and much more. Maps inside a GIS environment help students of all ages to ask better questions in part because during the inquiry, they allow for the scale and symbology to be changed, for additional layers to be added, and for powerful queries and statistics to be run on the data. The “what if” questions can be explored, such as: What if I changed the scale? What if I added this variable? What if I ran a different query? What if I examined a different area with the same variables? What if I classified the data differently?
ArcGIS provides a platform for asking and analyzing questions.
What questions do you have about our world? How can GIS help you grapple with those questions, find answers, or ask additional questions?
- Joseph Kerski, Esri Education Manager