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翻译:叶秋芸(简介并寄信)
编辑:吴嘉哲(简介并寄信)


11.207/11.208 的第二单元--公共管理计算机化导论,包括四天的课堂和实验习作。本课程需附带缴交一个作业。本课程将使学生熟悉在管理规划的领域中,愈来愈广泛应用的其他计算机化管理方法。本课程中特别重视学生将学习到如何建立和应用数据库 (资料输入、输出、查询和设计关联化数据库),并且从人口统计资料建立制作清晰、据实的图表。我们将透过各种实例和亲自操作的经验进行教学。透过课堂讨论和客座演讲,我们将带领学生思考有关分析大量表格和地区性资料,说明真实世界的规划问题或议题的能力。学生应该自己做完练习,并交回图表和习作作业给计算机教室助教。如果计算机数量不足,部分学生将会二人一机,当各组在实习时,每一个组员务必参与小组练习。至于作业方面,我们允许(同时鼓励)成立小组讨论问题的概念和作业问题所需的一般流程。但每一个学生必须个别缴交自己做好的作业。学生必须及时成问题集,以避免在作业成绩上扣分。

第一堂:11.208 和主题图表导论

(上午 八 时三十分至十时正)
主题图表导论
制作和打印主题图表

阅读资料:

  • Hutchinson 与 Daniel,第一章:〈Arcview导论〉(Introducing ArcView)和第三章:〈开始的第一步:计划和观点〉(Getting Started: Projects and Views)
  • 〈图表的元素〉(Elements of the Map),《如何以图表进行解释》(How to Lie with Maps)第二章 (M. Monmonier, 1991)

〈将个人计算机软件做为空间分析的架构〉(Loosely Coupled PC Programs as a Framework for Spatial Analysis)(E. Bossard 与 H. Zhang, 1993)

计算机教室练习 A

(上午十时正至十一时三十分)
以资料表和国界文件建立和打印一个简单的图表

第二堂:犯罪个案研究和基本数据库管理

(中午一时正至二时三十分)
分析图表的个案研究
将资料输入数据库 (资料汇入、输入)
数据库的查询 (选择栏位和记录、简单总计)
将资料汇出数据库 (资料汇出)

阅读资料:

  • 〈经济犯罪的空间模式和社会经济的特性〉(Spatial Patterns of Property Crimes and Socio-Economic Characteristics)(J. Ferreira, 1986)
  • 〈资料、计算机和规划人员〉(Data, Computers and Planners)(S. Lewis)
  • 〈规划的数据库管理工具〉(Database Management Tools for Planning)(J. Ferreira, 1990)

微软MSQuery使用手册:导论与节录

计算机教室练习 B

(中午二时三十分至四时正)
数据库基本作业:资料输入、简单查询、输出

第三堂:人口统计普查的意义,第一部分

(中午四时正至五时三十分)
1990 年人口及住宅普查
撷取人口普查资料的工具
使用人口普查资料:标准化、以时序进行比较

阅读资料:

  • 〈1990 年人口普查结果导论〉(Introduction to 1990 Census Products)

〈90年人口普查的基本资料〉("Census '90 Basics)(美国人口普查局)

计算机教室开放时间

(下午五时三十分至六时三十分)

第四堂:关联化数据库导论,第一部份

(上午 八 时三十分至十时正)
关联化模型导论
中阶查询:统计功能 (分类)、多资料表查询

阅读资料:

〈SQL导论〉(Introducing SQL),《SQL的图示导论(A Visual Introduction to SQL)》第一章第74-104页、124-137页(Trimble 与 Chappell, 1989)

计算机教室练习 C

(上午十时正至十一时三十分)
以调查资料和城市管理记录建立和执行查询作业

第五堂:人口普查资料之解释,第二部分

(中午一时正至二时三十分)
1990 年人口及住宅普查
撷取人口普查资料的工具
使用人口普查资料:标准化、以时序进行比较

阅读资料:

Hutchinson 与 Daniel,第六章:〈资料查询〉(Data Queries)和第 78-81页(〈结合资料表〉(Joining Tables)、〈结合与联结之比较〉(Joining vs. Link))

计算机教室练习 D

(中午二时三十分至四时正)
从STF 文件撷取人口普查资料

第六堂:关联化数据库的原则 (第二部分)

(中午四时正至五时三十分)
上课前一日派发问题集
数据库设计的元素
包含资料表中的“一对多”关联化模型资料
结构性查询语言(SQL)导论

计算机教室开放时间

(下午五时三十分至六时三十分)

第七堂:数据库管理规划

(上午 8 时三十分至十时正)
有关目前和未来的数据库管理规划总览

阅读资料:

  • NSDF-国家空间资料的基础架构
  • Joseph Ferreira, 〈公共机构与低收入社群之间的资讯互动〉(Informating the Dialogue between Public Agencies and Low-Income Communities)

“高科技与低收入社群:先进资讯科技之正面使用及面面观”(High Technology and Low-Income Communities: Prospects for the Positive Use of Advanced Information Technology)第七章,Donald A. Schön, Bish Sanyal, 与 William J. Mitchel编辑, MIT Press, 1998。

计算机教室练习 E

(上午十时正至十一时三十分)
计算机教室课,主题为应用关联化模型之人口统计资料

第八堂:准备有效的图表

(中午一时正至二时三十分)
准备准确、清晰、有说服力沟通方式的图表

阅读资料:

  • Hutchinson 与 Daniel,第五章:〈展示资料〉(Displaying Data)
  • 〈图表引导社会至错误的方向?〉(D. Wood, 1993)

《如何利用地图撒谎》(How to Lie with Maps)的第九章:〈资料地图:利用调查胡扯〉(Data Maps: Making Nonsense of the Census)(M. Monmonier, 1991)

计算机教室练习F

(中午二时三十分至四时正)
提高图表的准确性、清晰度及说服力

计算机教室开放时间

(下午四时正至六时三十分)

第九堂:空间分析及网际网络概论

(上午 八 时三十分至十时正)
介绍网际网络和GIS的图表资源
网络的图表资源

阅读资料:

〈针对当地规划的地理资讯系统〉(Geographic Information Systems for Local Planning) (J. Levine and J. Landis, 1989)

计算机教室练习G

(上午十时正至十一时三十分)
整合人口普查数据和标准图表

展示活动:规划软件和PSS研究的展览

(上午十二时正至一时三十分)
图表和空间分析的软件工具示范

第十堂:课程总结

(上午二时正至三时正)
地理资料系统和课程总结导论
(提供点心)

小组讨论

(上午三时正至五时正)
与教师和校友进行小组讨论:数据库、图表和空间分析如何应用于计划中?规划人员应该知道什么?规划的走向?未来的方向等。

阅读资料:

  • 〈资料的认知-了解您应该知道的资料〉(Be Data Literate--Know What to Know),Wall Street Journal (P. F. Drucker, 1992)
  • 〈地理资料系统之外的事:计算机和规划的专业人才〉(Beyond Geographic Information Systems: Computers and the Planning Professional),(B. Harris, 1989)
  • 〈企业的资料化:二十一世纪的主要议程〉(Informate the Enterprise: an Agenda for the 21st Century),National Forum (S. Zuboff, 1991)




The second module of 11.207/11.208, Introduction to Computers in Public Management, will consist of four days of lectures and laboratory exercises. There will be a single homework assignment. This course will acquaint you with additional computer-based methods that are becoming widely used in the planning world. Specifically, you will learn how to build and use databases (data input and output, querying, and relational database design) and create clear, factual maps from demographic data. We will teach these by means of numerous examples and hands-on experience. Through class discussions and guest lectures, we will also engage your thinking on the issues and competence involved in analyzing large volumes of tabular and geographic data to address real world planning questions or issues. You should work individually on the exercises and turn in the maps and lab assignments to the lab monitors. If we are short machines and some of you have to work in pairs, be sure that each of you spends some time controlling the mouse/keyboard while the group does the exercise! For the homework set, small-group discussion of the concepts and general procedures needed for the homework questions is okay (and encouraged). But each individual must turn in their own individual homework set based on 'hands-on' work that they did personally. Timely completion of the problem set is required to avoid any reduction in the homework set grade.

LECTURE 1: Introduction To 11.208 And Thematic Mapping

(8:30 - 10:00 AM)
Introduction to thematic mapping
Producing and printing thematic maps

Reading:

  • Hutchinson and Daniel, Chapter 1: "Introducing ArcView" and Chapter 3: "Getting Started: Projects and Views."
  • "Elements of the Map", Chapter 2 of How to Lie with Maps (M. Monmonier, 1991)

"Loosely Coupled PC Programs as a Framework for Spatial Analysis" (E. Bossard and H. Zhang, 1993)

LAB EXERCISE A

(10:00 - 11:30 AM)
Building and printing a simple map from database tables and boundary files

LECTURE 2: Crime Case Study and Elementary Database Management

(1:00 - 2:30 PM)
Case study in analytic mapping
Getting data into a database (data import, entry)
Simple queries on a database (selecting fields and records, simple aggregation)
Getting data out of the database (data export)

Reading:

  • "Spatial Patterns of Property Crimes and Socio-Economic Characteristics" (J. Ferreira, 1986)
  • "Data, Computers and Planners" (S. Lewis).
  • "Database Management Tools for Planning" (J. Ferreira, 1990).

MSQuery Manual: Introduction and Excerpts

LAB EXERCISE B

(2:30 - 4:00 PM)
Essential database operations: data input, simple queries, output.

LECTURE 3: Making Sense Of The Census, Part I

(4:00 - 5:30 PM)
The 1990 Census of Population and Housing
Tools to extract census data
Using census data: normalization, comparisons over time

Reading:

  • "Introduction to 1990 Census Products,"

"Census '90 Basics" (U.S. Census Bureau)

OPEN LAB TIME

(5:30 - 6:30 PM)

LECTURE 4: Introduction To Relational Databases, Part I

(8:30 - 10:00 AM)
Introduction to the relational model
Intermediate queries: aggregation functions (grouping), multi-table queries

Reading:

"Introducing SQL", Chapter 1, pp. 74-104, 124-137 of A Visual Introduction to SQL (Trimble and Chappell, 1989)

LAB EXERCISE C

(10:00 - 11:30 AM)
Build and run queries on survey data and urban management records

LECTURE 5: Making Sense Of The Census, Part II

(1:00 - 2:30 PM)
The 1990 Census of Population and Housing
Tools to extract census data
Using census data: normalization, comparisons over time

Reading:

Hutchinson and Daniel, Chapter 6: "Data Queries," and pp. 78-81 ("Joining Tables," "Joining vs. Link")

LAB EXERCISE D

(2:30 - 4:00 PM)
Extracting Census data from STF files

LECTURE 6: Principles Of Relational Databases, Part II

(4:00 - 5:30 PM)
Problem Set handed out prior day.
Elements of database design
The relational model of data including "One-to-many" relationships among data tables
Introduction to Structured Query Language (SQL)

OPEN LAB TIME

(5:30 - 6:30 PM)

LECTURE 7: Database Management In Planning

(8:30 - 10:00 AM)
An overview of planning uses of database management, both now and in the future.

Reading:

Chapter 7 in: High Technology and Low-Income Communities: Prospects for the Positive Use of Advanced Information Technology, Edited by Donald A. Schön, Bish Sanyal, and William J. Mitchell, MIT Press, 1998.

LAB EXERCISE E

(10:00 - 11:30 AM)
Lab session emphasizing Census data and applying the relational model

LECTURE 8: Preparing Effective Maps

(1:00 - 2:30 PM)
Tips on preparing maps that communicate accurately, clearly, and persuasively

Reading:

  • Hutchinson and Daniel, Chapter 5: "Displaying Data."
  • "Are Maps Sending Society in the Wrong Direction?" (D. Wood, 1993)

"Data Maps: Making Nonsense of the Census", Chapter 9 of How to Lie with Maps (M. Monmonier, 1991)

LAB EXERCISE F

(2:30 - 4:00 PM)
Enhancing the accuracy, clarity and persuasiveness of the map

OPEN LAB TIME

(4:00 - 6:30 PM)

LECTURE 9: Spatial Analysis And Internet Overview

(8:30 - 10:00 AM)
Introduction to Internet and GIS mapping resources
Web mapping resources

Reading:

"Geographic Information Systems for Local Planning" (J. Levine and J. Landis, 1989)

LAB EXERCISE G

(10:00 - 11:30 AM)
Integrating orthophotos with census data

DEMONSTRATION: Exhibition Of Planning Software And PSS Research

(12:00 -1:30 PM)
Demonstrations of software tools for mapping and spatial analysis

LECTURE 10: Course Summary

(2:00 - 3:00 PM)
Introduction to geographical information systems and course summary
(Refreshments will be served)

PANEL DISCUSSION

(3:00 - 5:00 PM)
Panel discussion with instructors and alumni/ae: How are databases, mapping and spatial analysis used in planning? What should planners know? Where to from here? Future directions.

Reading:

  • "Be Data Literate--Know What to Know", Wall Street Journal (P.F. Drucker, 1992)
  • "Beyond Geographic Information Systems: Computers and the Planning Professional" (B. Harris, 1989)
  • "Informate the Enterprise: an Agenda for the 21st Century", National Forum (S. Zuboff, 1991)



 
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