Main navigation
- Programs
- Subjects
- Universities
- Destinations
- Advice
Professionals skilled in GIS&T find abundant job prospects across private firms and public institutions in diverse sectors such as consumer navigation tech, engineering consulting, environmental and resource management, emergency response, land surveying, transportation, geospatial intelligence, agriculture and biosecurity, socioeconomic research, strategic business development, public health and medical services, and urban design and planning. Their responsibilities may involve processing spatial information with mapping and statistical tools, creating digital maps by integrating geographic and non-spatial data, building and managing relational databases, coding scripts and programs to enhance and accelerate analytical processes, and crafting tailored software solutions for web-based geospatial services. These activities demand a wide array of technical abilities, analytical reasoning, and inventive problem-solving.
Geographic Information Science (GIScience) forms the foundation for the effective application of geospatial tools and techniques, encompassing geographic information systems (GIS), remote sensing data collection and interpretation, cartography and map creation, and quantitative spatial analysis and modeling. Together, this domain of expertise is known as Geographic Information Science and Technology (GIS&T).