Thank you to everyone.  These are all great comments and suggestions.  I am 
going to go through each email and build my worksheet.  I promise to share my 
work with the community.

Thanks
Tom Mueller

________________________________
From: Steven Johnson [[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, January 22, 2015 8:00 PM
To: Mueller, Thomas
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [HOT] Humanitarian Mapping for a class

Hi Tom,
Glad to see you incorporating HOT into your geography classes. For starters, 
I'd suggest you take a look at some of the material we've compiled on the 
TeachOSM site[1] , which includes basic information on creating a workflow, 
grading & rubric, as well as some case studies. Secondly, I'd encourage you to 
subscribe to the TeachOSM mailing list[2] and post your query there where other 
educators are likely to see it. Lastly, you might talk to Nuala Cowen and 
Richard Hinton at George Washington University. Nuala and Richard have 
incorporated digitizing exercises for HOT in their classes and have a approach 
to making sure students complete the tasks without resorting to minimum time.

HTH,
SEJ


[1] http://teachosm.org/
[2] https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/teachosm

-- SEJ
-- twitter: @geomantic
-- skype: sejohnson8

There are two types of people in the world. Those that can extrapolate from 
incomplete data.

On Thu, Jan 22, 2015 at 1:53 PM, Mueller, Thomas 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Hello

Hello, I have been working slowly trying to integrate humanitarian mapping into 
my classes and students’ education over the past couple of years .  I am a 
Geography professor, but I admit I am a jack of all trades master of none (as I 
teach crime mapping, demographic analysis, GIS, etc.)  I have tried several 
small projects– some successful and others not so successful.  This year in one 
of my upper level classes I have assigned a Humanitarian Mapping assignment.  
The students will be working on the Mapping Kamrangirchar (Dhaka, Bangladesh).  
I felt this was a good project for my students since there are quite a few 
structures that need to be mapped.    I am requesting that my students spend 30 
minutes per week, every week mapping structures for this project.  Obviously 
this should not be a difficult for them, but I am hoping it will accomplish 
several objectives including:

1)      Help map the area

2)      Help the students understand how they can “donate” their time to help 
(within a topic in their field)

3)      Hopefully this will become part of their routine so they will continue, 
etc.

Also it will make sure that I donate my time too to this endeavor.

I have one question – how is the best way for me to check that they have 
completed this assignment every week?  Should I have them copy and paste their 
history on to a Word Document?  Is there a better way?

Hopefully if this project is successful, then I am hoping to integrate this 
assignment into more of my classes.

Thank you for your time
Tom Mueller

Thomas R. Mueller, Ph.D., GISP
Advisor: Geography Major with GIS and Emergency Management Concentration
Co - Director: Pennsylvania View
Department of Earth Sciences, California University of Pennsylvania
"A man never gets to this station in life without being helped, aided, shoved, 
pushed and prodded to do better." - Johnny Unitas


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