Geographic Information Systems Minor

Coordinator: Associate Professor Xiao 

The Geographic Information Systems (GIS) minor is designed to prepare students with the basic training necessary to enter the rapidly expanding field of geographic information science. Employment opportunities are limitless for students who are proficient with this interdisciplinary tool. The U.S. Department of Labor has listed geospatial technologies like GIS as one of the three most important high growth industries in the 21st century. Well-qualified GIS specialists are sought in the areas of business, disaster mitigation, economics, education, emergency management, environmental studies, homeland security, law enforcement, physical sciences, political campaign management, public policy research and analysis, transportation, and urban development and planning. The minor provides students with fundamental knowledge and skills in GIS, and opportunities to explore application of these skills in courses selected from a wide variety of disciplines. Students are given hands-on experience with state-of-the-art computer programs and software.

This minor includes courses from the computing sciences, communications, economics, environmental studies, history and geography, marketing and entrepreneurship, political science and policy studies, sport and event management, and statistics departments. There are three components to the curriculum: a set of three core technology courses, a pair of elective disciplinary courses in which GIS can be a supporting tool, and a capstone experience consisting of a significant project or internship in the student’s area of interest.

Minor Requirements:

Required courses: 8 sh

GEO2500/ENS2500Introduction to GIS: Vector

4 sh

GEO2502Introduction to GIS: Raster

4 sh


Capstone Project: 2 sh

Approved GEO 4999 Research Credits, GEO 4991 Independent Study, or GEO 4985 internship with significant GIS component. Meet with GIS program coordinator to discuss and receive approval form.

Choose four hours from the following: 4 sh

CSC1100Data Science and Visualization

4 sh

CSC1300Computer Science I

4 sh

BUS2110Management Information Systems

4 sh

Select two discipline-specific courses from the following: 8 sh

ECO3300Introduction to Econometrics

4 sh

ECO4210Urban Economics and Planning

4 sh

ENS1110Introduction to Environmental Science

3 sh

ENS3200Restoration Ecology

4 sh

ENS3300Wildlife Ecology

4 sh

ENS3310Biogeography and Conservation

4

ENS3400/GEO3400Water Resources Management

4 sh

GEO1210Global Physical Environments

4 sh

GEO3450Global Environmental Change

4 sh

MKT4160Global Marketing

4 sh

PHS3010Introduction to Epidemiology

4 sh

PHS3020Global Health

4 sh

POL2200Research Methods in Political Science and Public Policy

4 sh

POL3210Public Opinion Polling

4 sh

PUB2310Public Administration

4 sh

SPT2260Facility and Venue Management

4 sh

STS3270Statistical Computing for Data Management

4 sh

For ECO 3300, ECO 4210, ENS 3200, ENS 3300, MKT 4160, PHS 3010, PHS 3020, STS 3270; consult the course description for information on course prerequisites.

Total Credit Hours: 22

Program Outcomes

Practice the fundamentals of data management

Demonstrate GIS software proficiency

Understanding the principals coordinate systems and spatial analysis

Ability to apply geospatial analysis techniques across a variety of disciplines and professional applications

Understand and apply basics of cartographic design

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