UA Cossatot Agriculture program hosted GIS Day featuring agriculture industry experts
to discuss the use of geographic information system (GIS) technology in farming and
land assessment with area educators. GIS technology aids in the collection, organization,
and analysis of data to improve agronomic decisions.
In addition to sharing information about employment opportunities for people with
GIS skills and experience, the presentation began the conversation about adding technical
training in high schools and at the community college level.
The OPEN-GATE grant that the UA Cossatot Agriculture program received earlier this
year through the Center for Advanced Spatial Technology at the University of Arkansas
will host workshops, like this one, to help educators implement GIS technology and
skills into their curriculum. De Queen-Mena Educational Co-op, local Ag teachers,
EAST teachers, and GT teachers are invited to attend.
UA Cossatot Agriculture Instructor Kelli Harris, said, “The goal of everything we
do in our agriculture program is to employ our agriculture graduates. This GIS grant
is going to open doors for not only our students in employment, but also for our agriculture
industry in Southwest Arkansas.”
Presenting were Garrett Jones from Pettit Machinery (pictured) and Kevin Pruett from
Total Assessments. Jones uses GIS technology in his work with John Deere machinery.
“We are moving into a time where unmanned tractors will be widely used for farming,”
Jones stated. “Anyone who knows how to diagnose electrical problems and repair GPS
equipment will be invaluable. They will be paid like doctors in the future.”
Pruett uses GIS technology for land assessment.
Pruett explained, “Where not so long ago you used a worksheet to plot land, we are
now using drones and airplanes with GIS to map and identify soil types.”
Other local agriculture industries that can use GIS technology are timber, row cropping,
poultry, beef cattle, and hay production.
Harris stated, “I hope this grant and new opportunities for our students remind our
community of the importance of agriculture education in our school and for our country.
Agriculture is so much more than farming.”
Harris hopes that providing more GIS-skilled individuals into the workforce will aid
in bringing new industry to southwest Arkansas.
Harris explained that UAC’s new Natural Resources associate degree, which is transferable
to University of Arkansas Monticello, along with GIS training provide excellent choices
for students seeking an agriculture career that doesn’t specifically involve poultry
or cattle. This opportunity allows individuals to remain in southwest Arkansas.
The agriculture industry makes up twenty percent of United States’ economy. Technology
like GIS provides research-based information and tools to the industry to stay ahead
of food demand.