Enhancing Earth and Environmental Science Undergraduate Students’ Perception of Geographic Information Systems through Short Clips
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
DeFelipe, Irene; Jerez-Longres, Paula Sofía; Pérez Cáceres, Irene; Valenzuela, Pablo; Galve Arnedo, Jorge Pedro; Rodríguez-Ruano, Sonia; Ortega Diago, Zaida; Adrados, Luna; Bernabé, José Manuel; Crespo, José; Montes, Romina Marisel; Pereira, Lola; Ballesteros Posada, DanielEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Geographic Information System Earth science environmental science
Fecha
2024-09-19Referencia bibliográfica
DeFelipe, I. et. al. Educ. Sci. 2024, 14, 1026. [https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14091026]
Patrocinador
European Union’s ERASMUS+ (Capacity Building) programme (project SUGERE: 598477-EPP-1-2018-1-PT-EPPKA2-CBHE-JP); Innovation and Good Practice in Teaching Projects Short Clips: aplicación profesional de los SIG en Ciencias de la Tierra (22-106), funded by Universidad de GranadaResumen
Geographic Information Systems (GISs) cover a wide range of Earth and environmental
science disciplines that have become essential for spatial data management, easing the digital
transformation needs of our society. Despite the usefulness of GISs, they remain underutilised in
academia, and many students do not understand the possibilities that these tools offer. To familiarise
university students with the potential of GISs, we designed 11 short clips (less than 5 min long)
recorded by Earth scientists with diverse backgrounds who shared their work experience with GISs
to solve real-world problems. Through these short clips, we emphasised not only the multidisciplinary
uses of GISs but also provided professional references for undergraduate students, including
societal aspects such as gender equality, national and international mobility, private-to-public-sector
transitioning, and different family circumstances. As a result, the students expressed their interest in
the applications of GISs, many of which were completely new to them, highlighting the potential of
GISs in terms of entrepreneurship and their usefulness in mitigating global change. Thus, we were
able to transfer knowledge from research to university education and foster spatial data management
skills in Earth science.