GIS Guide
GIS Course Fall 2013
Baruch Geoportal News
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Geospatial Services at Baruch
- Take a workshop on open source GIS
- Sign up for online ArcGIS courses
- Learn about GIS on the web and via books
- Find GIS data on the web and via the campus geoportal
- Explore resources for NYC neighborhood data
- Discover how to use and access US Census data
- Contact the Geospatial Librarian with questions or make an appt for a consultation
Geographic Information Systems Practicum

GIS consists of software and data used for geographical analysis and map making. It can be applied to any discipline.
Introduction to GIS using Open Source Software is a day-long workshop offered each semseter. Current graduate students, faculty and staff from throughout CUNY can register.
Visit the GIS practicum page for eligibility, registration, and course details. Dates for summer 2013: June 7th.
What is GIS?
GIS is an integrated collection of software and data that visually organizes information around the concepts of geographic location and space. GIS can be used for geographic analysis, map making, database management, and geospatial statistics. GIS can be applied to many applications in several fields of study. You can use GIS to:
- Study the distribution of populations
- Study physcial features of the earth and natrual phenomena
- Find the optimal location for starting a business or locating an event
- Identify markets to target
- Identify geographic patterns like clustering
- Determine the best routes or paths to follow
- Tie together separate pieces of data to create new information
- Create maps

Visit the USGS GIS Poster and the Encyclopedia of Geographic Information Science (CUNY affiliates only) to learn more.
Basic GIS Principles
- Geographic features are stored in individual GIS files. These files are the raw materials for geographic analysis and map making
- GIS files are georeferenced, which means features are drawn to scale and tied to actual places on the earth via coordinate systems and map projections
- Since coordinate systems and map projections are standardized, GIS data from many sources can be shared
- GIS files come in several different formats; they can represent continuous surfaces (raster) or discrete geometry (vector)
- GIS software is the tool / window for viewing, analyzing, and manipulating GIS data
- Data tables that are place-based can be converted into GIS data by either plotting the table data using latitude and longitude or by joining table data to GIS features using a common ID code
Geospatial Data Librarian |
Contact Info Newman Library 151 E 25th Street Box H-0520 New York, NY 10010 Room 421 - (646) 312-1657 Send Email Subject Expertise: Geography, GIS, Demography |
Need Help?
Contact the Geospatial Data Librarian if you need any GIS help or advice:
- setting up your project
- choosing software
- finding and processing data
- doing analysis
- dealing with errors
Send basic questions via email or make an appointment for a consultation.



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