Andres Abeyta is the Executive Director of Bootcamp GIS, https://bootcampgis.com. He has been traveling the world presenting new ideas as part of selective EdTech innovation programs:
And so, we share a short Q&A with Andres to help you get to know him a little better.
A { Andres }: Geography, history, and politics are always mixed together if you look at how the world has evolved. I really recommend ‘Undaunted Courage’ by Stephen Ambrose. It’s the story of the Lewis and Clark expedition and teaches you a lot about the exploration of the West enroute to becoming the United States. Fascinating read!
A { Andres }: Absolutely. Actually this problem exists in all tech sectors. It’s called the ‘Skills Gap’. Higher-ed is good at teaching general subjects that stand the test of time. But they are not that good at keeping pace with lots of quickly evolving tech: digital marketing, coding, cloud architecture, mobile development, and GIS solutions. And now you have blends of data science, machine learning, AI, and big data that all cross over to GIS. The result is that hiring managers like me are presented with recent graduates that have basically learned what I learned 25 years ago: gis data constructs, cartography, spatial analysis, remote sensing. A small percentage of the GIS education out there is really applied and can show that it’s keeping up with evolving trends. I’m passionate about this problem and is why I’ve been working with talented people to author a new kind of geospatial education platform. Check out some of these classes that address this need: https://platform.
A { Andres }: I like this question. Largely because I have lived it and authored a course called ‘Turn your idea into a successful startup’. I ran my own business for 20 years which gave me one perspective. And then I went through 3 startup incubators in San Diego, San Francisco, and New York. These retooled my thinking with a fresh look at startup principles. For the sake of brevity, I will offer 3 points of advice which are all about approach and less about tech.
A { Andres }: I have been giving advice to student groups in Zoom presentations this last year. You can even watch a recorded webinar here: https://bootcampgis.
A { Andres }: I’ve been one of those who have been thinking for a while that our industry would plateau and there would be a decreasing need in talent and companies in a saturated market. But it just hasn’t happened. The GIS industry continues to grow for a number of reasons: 1) More data collection sources with UAVs and Mobile Apps, 2) Ease of cloud data distribution, 3) Data explosion requiring analysis and machine learning logic, and 4) More ways to learn GIS. The opportunities clearly lie in two areas. The ‘ologist’ can more easily pick up GIS as a tool and quickly implement in their vertical for mass distribution of their geographic data. The GIS professional that marries GIS with a stronger IT background can quickly become a lead solution admin or architect.
A { Andres }: I have researched the EdTech sector intensively and see a projected growth to a $1T industry in the next few years. This was already a trend and when the pandemic happened, it added rocket fuel to content developers everywhere. We took the lead in GIS education by doing a survey of the skills gap. We tallied all the topics taught at 120 GIS programs. Then we tallied all of the skills requested in 300 GIS job announcements. The difference in the lists was very easy to see. The GIS Industry has really followed the growth in cloud, mobile, and data science and is asking for these skills which the majority of the college programs are not offering. So we have an active search for the best geospatial projects that demonstrate how GIS helps solve problems. Our model is to find the best thought leaders that can show you how to replicate their projects. So you get depth rather than breadth in a variety of GIS topics which allow you to get an applied GIS Certificate. It’s exciting for me to think, ‘I want a class on wildfire GIS, or COVID dashboard GIS, or ocean plastic GIS. Then make the class happen. Our team is gratified when we see a student make the choice in project-based classes versus a standard Intro to GIS. This really must be a national interest. I want to help people advance quicker in their geospatial skills, so they are prepared to do analysis and communication with all of the World’s pressing issues.
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Plug n Play – Beijing
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NYU – StartEd – New York City
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UCSD – Connect – San Diego
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Amazon – EdStart – San Francisco
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Harvard – Goldman Sachs EdTech Conference – Boston
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ASU/GSV – International EdTech Conference – San Diego
He has a Master’s degree from the San Diego State Geography Department and a Master’s in Education from University of New Mexico. He has been an innovative educator delivering custom onsite and online geospatial education to many government agencies around the country: BLM, USFS, USFWS, NPS, NOAA, US Navy, US Army, US Marine Corps, US Air Force. He has co-authored a new upper tier course list, https://platform.bootcampgis.
Andres Abeyta
Executive Director, Bootcamp GIS
Turning real GIS projects into marketable education
www.bootcampgis.com
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