This resource page features course content from the Knight Center for Journalism in the America's massive open online course (MOOC) titled " Intro to Mapping and GIS for Journalists." The four-week course took place from August 27 to September 23, 2018. We are now making the content free and available to students who took the course and anyone else who is interested in geography, map making, data visualization and visual storytelling. No geographic background is required.
The course, which was supported by the Knight Foundation, was taught by the Texas Tribune's Darla Cameron and Chris Essig. They created and curated the content for the course, which includes video classes and tutorials, readings, exercises, and more.
The course materials are broken up into four modules:
As you review this resource page, we encourage you to watch the videos, review the readings, and complete the exercises as time allows. The course materials build off each other, but the videos and readings also act as standalone resources that you can return to over time.
We hope you enjoy the materials and share them with others who are interested in geography, map making, data visualization and visual storytelling. If you have any questions, please contact us at journalismcourses@austin.utexas.edu.
Darla Cameron
Darla Cameron is a senior data visuals developer at the Texas Tribune, a non-profit news organization that covers politics and policy in Texas. Darla joined the Tribune in April 2018. Previously, she was a graphics editor at The Washington Post, where she told visual stories at the intersection of money and politics. Before that, she was a news artist at the Tampa Bay Times. Darla’s work has been recognized by the Society for News Design, Online News Association and Society of Professional Journalists. Darla was a fellow at the Poynter Institute and has taught mapping and graphics at The University of Missouri, where she studied journalism and geography. She is from western Colorado.
Chris Essig
Chris Essig is a data visuals developer at Texas Tribune, where he builds data visualizations and news apps. Before joining the team in February 2017, Chris spent almost six years in Iowa. Most recently, he was developer at The Gazette in Cedar Rapids for two and a half years. His team was involved in both engineering and newsroom projects. Before then, he was online editor at the Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier, which is where he got his start building graphics in newsrooms. He was also an adjunct professor at the University of Northern Iowa, teaching a course that covered both multimedia and data journalism. He is originally from Illinois and received a master’s degree in public affairs reporting from the University of Illinois in Springfield.
In this module, we’ll talk about the basic principles of map-making and what kind of data makes a good map. We’ll also start using QGIS to explore geographic data.
This module will cover:
Video Class
1. What is a map?
2. Sometimes, a map shouldn’t be a map
3. Components of a map
4. QGIS
Watch Video Transcript Sample Data
5. QGIS 2
Readings
1. Mapschool: a free introduction to geo [mapschool]
2. Axis maps cartography guide- what is a map? [axismaps]
3. Axis maps cartography guide- map design [axismaps]
4. Alike map- compare census tracts [alikemap]
5. Working with projections [QGIS Tutorisl]
6. What is the difference between Vector and Raster data models? [Stack Exchange]
In this module, we’ll dig into how and why journalists combine geographic datasets with other data to tell really great stories.
This module will cover:
Video Class
1. Best practices for showing two pieces of data on one map
2. How cartographers use color
3. Putting dots on a map (QGIS)
Watch Video Transcript Sample Data
4. Merging CSV data into shapefiles (QGIS)
Watch Video Transcript Sample Data
5. Creating a choropleth map (QGIS)
6. Editing data in QGIS
Readings
1. Hot cartography takes [Medium]
2. The lost art of critical map reading [graphicarto]
3. Election results in pink and blue [datawrapper]
In this module, we will dive deeper into how you can analyze data to make more complex maps. We’ll talk about how to draw story-worthy conclusions from what you find.
This module will cover:
Video Class
1. What does geographic analysis add to stories?
2. Making a dot density map
Watch Video Transcript Sample Data
3. Counting points with polygons
Watch Video Transcript Sample Data
4. Creating point buffers
Google Hangout with Aaron Williams and Armand Emamdjomeh
Readings
1. America is more diverse than ever — but still segregated [The Washington Post]
2. How one Houston suburb ended up in a reservoir [The New York Times]
3. The Rohingya crisis: life in the camps [Reuters Graphics]
4. QGIS: vector spatial analysis (Buffers) [QGIS doumentation]
In this module, we will talk about visualizing data and learn some design principles to keep in mind when publishing maps online or in print. We’ll also discuss how to take your new geographic skills to the next level.
This module will cover:
Video Class
1. What are maps bad at?
2. Geocoding
Watch Video Transcript Sample Data
3. Simplifying with QGIS
Watch Video Transcript Sample Data
4. Simplifying with MapShaper
Watch Video Transcript Sample Data
5. Exporting maps out of QGIS
Watch Video Transcript Sample Data
6. Next steps for learning how to get maps online
Readings
1. 20 unrequested map tips, part 1 [UX Blog]
2. 20 unrequested map tips, part 2 [UX Blog]
3. Election maps are telling you big lies about small things [The Washington Post]
4. When mapping the many disparities in Chicago, it can feel like it’s the same story being told [ProPublica]
5. Mapping, society and technology: simplification [University of Minnesota Open Library]