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Geographic Information Systems Technician

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AVG. SALARY

$69,650

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EDUCATION

Associate's degree

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JOB OUTLOOK

Stable

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Communication -- Solution

You've read, looked up the words, written a draft, edited the draft and proof-read it. Now you can send some easy-to-read instructions to your colleagues. This is what they might say:

Digitizing Techniques for the Map-It! Software in Three Easy Steps

Background Information

Using your mouse, this software will allow you to draw maps and display them on the monitor.

The mouse captures information from raster images, which is a set of horizontal lines on your screen. The horizontal lines are made up of pixels, the smallest elements in an image. The images might be maps or scanned air photographs (photographs that have been placed in a scanner to transfer them to the computer screen).

  1. Call up the image you want to use on your computer screen. The map you create will be composed of many layers. Each different type of layer is used to classify different types of information such as horizontal lines, pictures, area and symbols.

  2. In this example you'll put a line layer -- an image such as a national or state border -- on top of the image layer (the chosen photograph or graphic).

  3. You will then use the mouse to draw directly on the computer screen. The accuracy will be determined by how tight you can zoom in on any part of the image while drawing with the mouse.

You can also use this Map-It! software to capture maps that show elevation contour lines and maps that show religious groupings, language populations and natural resources.

This field is all about information -- it's the "I" in GIS!

For this reason, communication skills are vital. GIS experts have to work with clients to find out their information needs. Then they have to work with data to produce that information. Finally, they have to communicate that information back to their clients.

"[GIS workers] need the language arts as much as basic math," says GIS expert Shannon White.

"Good communication skills are invaluable," says GIS expert Joseph Kerski. "A lot of GIS is about communicating your data, so you need to have great speaking and writing skills, and listening skills, too. You need to communicate your results to your local government or your company.

"It's like any field -- there are quite a [few] terms," Kerski adds. "And that's why a good grounding in geography and information technology is important."


Contact

  • Email Support
  • 1-800-GO-TO-XAP (1-800-468-6927)
    From outside the U.S., please call +1 (424) 750-3900
  • North Dakota Career Resource Network
    ndcrn@nd.gov | (701) 328-9733

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