: Urban Planning and Social Science Laboratory

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11.188 Urban Planning and Social Science oratory http://web.mit.edu/11.188/www/syl11_188.html 11.188 : Urban Planning and Social Science oratory >> Course Home >> Syllabus >> Notes >> Exercises >> Homeworks >> Projects >> Test >> Evaluation >> Faculty & Staff INSTRUCTORS Course Website: http://mit.edu/11.188/www Prof. Joseph Ferreira, Jr., MIT Room 9-532, jf@mit.edu Office hours : Tuesday 2:00-3:00 & Thursday 10:30 - noon COURSE ADMINISTRATION Sue Delaney, Room 9-530, x3-0779, sld@mit.edu MEETINGS Monday: prep and exercises 2:30-5:00 PM in Room 9-251 [ prep and start of exercise are the key parts. Students can leave for other classes beginning at 3:30 or 4 and finish the exercises later on their own.] Additional supervised lab time (optional) will be reseved depending upon demand and TA availability. Wednesday: : 2:30-4:00 PM in Room 9-251 CREDITS 11.188 is an undergraduate subject that will satisfy both the Department and the Institute lab requirement and earns 3-6-3 units of undergraduate credit. This class uses lab exercises and a workshop setting to help students develop an in-depth understanding of the planning and public management uses of geographic information systems. The goals are to help students Acquire technical skills in the use of geographic information system (GIS) software and database management tools through lab exercises and homework using small (but real) local datasets, and project work involving the shared use of larger datasets and the mixing and matching of data from different sources. Acquire qualitative methods skills by: gathering data and documentation analyzing information, and presenting results effectively. Investigate the potential and practicality of GIS technologies in a typical planning setting and evaluate possible applications. Understand basic principles underlying the growth of web mapping, geospatial services, and location-aware computing. The workshop teaches GIS techniques and basic database management at a level that extends somewhat beyond the thematic mapping and data manipulation skills included in the Fall half-semester MCP core GIS and spatial analysis class, 11.205. Both 11.205 and 11.188 cover basic thematic mapping and the buffering and overlay operations (using vector and raster data)

11.188 Urban Planning and Social Science oratory http://web.mit.edu/11.188/www/syl11_188.html that are involved in basic 'site suitability' assessments. The 11.188 lab adds a bit more database management (using MS-Access), an introduction to model building tools (Model Builder), and a small, individual project. We try to teach GIS methods and techniques with some attention to open-ended planning questions that invite spatial analysis but will Require judgment and exploration to select relevant data and mapping techniques; Involve mixing and matching new, local data with extracts from official records (such as census data, parcel data and regional employment and population forecasts); Utilize spatial analysis techniques such as buffering, address matching, and overlays; Use other modeling and visualization techniques beyond thematic mapping (e.g., map mashups) ; Raise questions about the skills, strategy, and organizational support needed to sustain such analytic capability within a variety of local and regional planning settings. The prerequisites for the course are: A working familiarity with personal computing, spreadsheets, and the MIT Athena & CRON computing environments. A basic familiarity with elementary data analysis that most undergrads acquire via general Institute requirements, and most graduate students have already acquired via undergrad methods and analysis classes. The Spring class, 11.220 (Quantitative Reasoning I), can be taken concurrently a student wants to refresh their analytic skills using urban planning applications. Students will be expected to complete weekly lab exercises plus three homework sets covering readings and basic GIS skills. Students will also complete one in-class test and a small project of the student's choosing that draws on the skills taught in the class. This project will be presented to the class in an oral presentation and a brief written report. The project should require about the same effort as one of the homework sets. Due dates for these requirements are given in the schedule below. The GIS exercises will use ArcGIS software on WinAthena workstations. Exercises (collectively) 25% Three Homework Sets (collectively) 30% In-Class, Open-Book Test 23% Small Project 18% Class Participation 4% Please include your name and Athena username on all assignments, tests, etc., including those turned in electronically. We need this information to identify your work easily. All assignments with be submitted online using the Stellar website for the class. Turning in assignments promptly is important both for keeping current with the subject matter, which is cumulative, and to keep all students on a level playing field. Hence, we have adopted a strict policy towards credit for assignments that are turned in late. We will consider requests for extensions due to extenuating circumstances on a case-by-case basis, but please do not count on such requests being granted. exercises are typically due one week after the corresponding lab. A late lab exercise will be accepted up until one week after the original due date for a loss of one grade (e.g., a "check" becomes a "check-minus").

11.188 Urban Planning and Social Science oratory http://web.mit.edu/11.188/www/syl11_188.html After that, late assignments will receive no credit and will not be accepted. Late problem sets will have two points deducted for each day (weekends and holidays count for a single day ) that it is turned in after the due date. Hence, a problem set turned in three days late would lose 6 points. If it would have earned 90 points if turned in on time, it would receive only 84 points under these conditions. Regardless, after two weeks, no problem sets will be accepted if the answers have been posted. Final project write-ups are due on the last day of classes, May 14. Write-ups turned in after Friday, May 16 will lose 5 points. No project write-ups will be accepted after Monday, May 21. Plagiarism and cheating are both academic crimes. For this class, it is helpful and okay to discuss lab exercises and problem sets (but not tests) with other classmates, but the results and discussion that you turn in should be your own work and not anything copied from another person or paper. Never (1) turn in an assignment that you did not write yourself, (2) turn in an assignment for this class that you previously turned in for another class, or (3) cheat on an exam. If you do so, it may result in a failing grade for the class, and possibly even suspension from the college. Please see me if you have any questions about what constitutes plagiarism. Anyone caught cheating on an exam will be reported to the provost in line with recognized university procedures. There is no required-purchase text. Texts marked with an asterisk (*) will be held on reserve at Rotch Library. The books may be purchased from online retailers such esripress.esri.com, amazon.com, and barnesandnoble.com. on various used book sites. Some of these books can also be previewed extensively online. Some l inks to books.google.com previews are given in the syllabus for recommended readings. Ormsby, Tim, et at. Getting to Know ArcGIS Desktop (for ArcGIS 10). ESRI Press, Redlands CA, 2010, 2nd edition.(isbn-13: 978-1589482609). (Available directly from esripress.esri.com for ~$80 and at Amazon, et al. for less than $50.) Earlier versions are available in the Library. (*) Monmonier, Mark. How to Lie with Maps. Second Edition. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996. Hardcover: ISBN 0-226-53420-0. Paperback: ISBN 0-226-53421-9. The paperback is now under $15 at Amazon and Barnes and Noble and well worth it. (http://www.amazon.com/how-lie-maps-2nd-edition/dp/0226534219/ref=sr_1_1?ie=utf8& qid=1360166232&sr=8-1&keywords=how+to+lie+with+maps) (The 1991 first edition, ISBN 0-226-53415-4, is also fine.) (*) Longley, Goodchild, Maguire and Rhind, Geographic Information Systems and Science, Third Edition, 2010. ISBN: 978-0-470-72144-5 (available for ~$100 at:http://www.wiley.com /WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-EHEP001475.html ) The earlier edition from 2001 is adequate, ISBN: 0-471-89275-0 and is in the Library. (*) Peng and Tsou, Internet GIS: Distributed Geographic Information Services for the Internet and Wireless Networks, John Wiley, New York, 2003, ISBN: 0-471-35923-8. (Pape versionavailable at http://www.wiley.com/wileycda/wileytitle/productcd-0471359238.html (*) O'Sullivan, David, and David Unwin, Geographic Information Analysis, 2nd edition, John Wiley & Sons, New Jersey (2010) ISBN: 978-0-470-28857-3. (Available for ~$115 from Wiley at:http://www.wiley.com/wileycda/wileytitle/productcd-0470288574.html ). The earlier 2003 edition (in Library) is adequate: ISBN: 0471211761 Arctur, David and Michael Zeiler, Designing Geodatabases: Case Studies in GIS Data Modeling, ESRI Press, Redlands, CA, 2004, ISBN: 9781589480216 (Available for ~$45 at ESRI Press: http://esripress.esri.com/display/index.cfm?fuseaction=display&websiteid=85& moduleid=0 ) Zeiler, Modeling our world: the ESRI guide to geodatabase design. 2010 ESRI Press. ISBN: 9781589482784 (Available for ~$45 at ESRI Press: http://esripress.esri.com/display /index.cfm?fuseaction=display&websiteid=178&moduleid=0 ). Wed., Feb. 5 Introduction to the Class and GIS; GIS Principles & methods, plus GIS at MIT on WinAthena computers Reading:

11.188 Urban Planning and Social Science oratory http://web.mit.edu/11.188/www/syl11_188.html NCGIA Core Curriculum in GIScience - unit 2: What is GIS? Ormsby, et al, Chapter 1 Zeiler, Chapter 1 Introduction to GeoProcessing Presentation ( notes by Lisa Sweeney, MIT GIS Services, during MCP Orientation, Sept. 1, 2010) Mon, Feb. 10 1: GIS Introduction Exercise ArcGIS basics Ormsby, et al, Chapter 2 & 3 + 6 & 7 Monmonier, Chapter 2: "Elements of the Map." Wed., Feb. 12 GIS Models, GIS Data Manipulation and Querying Ormsby, et al, Chapter 8 & 9 Monmonier, Chapter 3: "Map Generalization: Little White Lies and Lots of Them." Longley, et al, Chapter 4: Georeferencing. Longley, et al, Chapter 3: Representing Geography Tues., Feb.18 2: Thematic Mapping in ArcMap (symbolization and exploratory vs. explanatory mapping) Exercise1due Homework Set 1 posted online Note: Tuesday, Feb. 18, follows a MONDAY class schedule Ferreira, J. Jr., 1990. "Database Management Tools for Planning", Journal of the American Planning Association, Winter, pp. 78-84. [on reserve] Wed., Feb 19 Relational Databases (and MS-Access) Modeling our world, Chp 4 & Chp 5 Ormsby et al, Chapter 15 & 16 Longley et al, Chapter 9: "Geographic Data Modeling." Longley et al, Chapter 11: "Creating and Maintaining Geospatial Databases." Mon., Feb. 24 3: Database Operations in ArcGIS (spatial selection, query selection, tabular joins, spatial joins) Exercise 2 due Ormsby, et al, Chapter 14

11.188 Urban Planning and Social Science oratory http://web.mit.edu/11.188/www/syl11_188.html Wed., Feb. 26 Making Sense of the Census Monmonier, Chapter 10 (Chapter 9 in the first edition): "Data Maps: Making Nonsense of the Census." Mon., March 3 Wed., March 5 5: Working with 2000 Census Data & MIT Geodata Repository [Note: 4 is deferred until next week ( Database Aggregation, SQL, and Charts)] Exercise 3 due Coordinate Systems and Projections Homework Set 1 due Homework Set 2 distributed Prof. Peter Dana's notes (U. of Colorado) http://www.colorado.edu/geography/gcraft/notes /mapproj/mapproj.html Ormsby, et al, Chapter 13 Mon.., March 10 Wed., March 12 4: Database Aggregation, SQL, and Charts (both #4 and #5 are due on Monday, March 12) Spatial Analysis (Vector Analysis). Homework Set 1 due Homework Set 2 distributed Reading: Ormsby, et al, Chapter 11: Preparing Data for Analysis. Ormsby, et al, Chapter 12: Analyzing Spatial Data." Mon., March 17 6: Vector Spatial Analysis (buffers, polygon overlay, area allocation, using ArcTools) Exercise 5 due Ormsby, et al, Chapter 11: Preparing Data for Analysis. Ormsby, et al, Chapter 12: Analyzing Spatial Data. Wed., March 19 Mon., March 31 Spatial Data Models and Spatial Analysis II (Raster) Homework Set 2 part 1 due to be distributed 7: Raster Spatial Analysis (Interpolation, Raster Operations, Spatial Analyst) and Model Builder Exercise 6 due

11.188 Urban Planning and Social Science oratory http://web.mit.edu/11.188/www/syl11_188.html Wed.,April 2 Intro to Web Services Peng and Tsou, Chapter 1 & Chapter 4 Mon.,April 7 8: Introduction to Web Services Exercise 7 due to be distributed Wed., April 9 GIS Data Creation, Advanced Raster Operations, and Model Building Homework Set 2 part 2 due Homework Set 3 distributed Ormsby, et al, Chapter 17 & 20 Mon., April 14 Test (in class, open book) Wed., April 16 Model Builder and review of labs/homework Homework Set 3 part 1 due at 11 PM via Stellar Mon., April 21 Wed., April 23 Patriot's Day Holiday Tips on Project Presentation and Writeup, plus Project Work Project Proposal due Exercise 8 due Reading: Notes by Cherie Abbanat, DUSP Writing Specialist, on "Creating Your 11.188/11.520 Presentation and Report" Mon., April 28 Wed., April 30 Mon., May 5 Wed., May 7 Mon., May 12 Project Work Homework Set 3 part 2 due GIS Data Creation, Network Analysis & Interoperable Web Services Project Proposal Feedback Project Work Project Work + Project Title and Abstract due Project work and test feedback Project presentations

11.188 Urban Planning and Social Science oratory http://web.mit.edu/11.188/www/syl11_188.html Wed., May 14 Project presentations Last modified on 1 Feb. 2014 [jf] Back to the 11.188 Home Page. Back to the CRON Home Page.