Mapping New Visions of History With GIS
GIS use in the classroom is extending beyond geology, geography, and archaeology into other less-science based disciplines.
The Bowdoin News archives from March of this year contains an interesting article describing professor Patrick Rael's "The
Civil War Era" class. Students used GIS to process US Census Bureau information from
the 1790s, mapping out the election that gave Abraham Lincoln the
presidency. From the article:
"Using Geographic Information Systems (GIS) technology - a software system that allows users to convert data into detailed maps - his students mapped out voting and demographic information from the period to visualize the impact of social forces, such as early industrialization and slavery, on voting behavior....Rael's project demonstrates the possibilities of GIS-based scholarship and teaching in the humanities, a growing trend among colleges and universities....GIS is crossing disciplines and is being used in areas such as healthcare, law enforcement, environmental research, sociology, and land planning."
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