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So, hello everyone. Welcome again
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to another video from EGIS Associates.
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Today, we're going to continue on
with the last video we did
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and talk more about GIS certification.
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Specifically, we're going to look
at the GISP certification,
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talk about: what is it?
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Where did it come from?
What direction is it going?
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And those kind of things,
to really help you
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make a better choice on, you know,
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is this a certification you
want to pursue?
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So what is GISP?
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What is the GIS
Professional Certification?
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Well, as we talked about
in the last video,
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we mentioned there
were two types of certification.
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You had professional certification
and technical certification.
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Well, GISP
is a professional certification.
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It is managed
by the GIS Certification Institute,
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or "GISCI," which you can find out more
at their website,
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www.gisci.org and this
was first developed,
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the certification itself,
was developed in 2003 by URISA:
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the Urban and Regional
Information Systems Association.
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They had been working on creating
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a professional certification
for the GIS industry
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for several years,
going back into the late 90s,
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and trying to determine,
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how do you certify somebody in a field
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that has such a wide breadth of reach?
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And it took many years
for them to come up with
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what is now the GISP.
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URISA, however, didn't want it just
to be a URISA certification.
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While many people still call the GISP
the "URISA certification,"
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or think it belongs to URISA,
it doesn't.
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URISA spun off the GISP cert
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and worked to create the GISCI in 2004,
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so that the GISP
would be a true industry certification
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and not just linked
to a single professional body.
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So, what they did with a form of GISCI
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is invited multiple
professional organizations
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to be part of that body,
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so that you wouldn't have
competing certifications in the field,
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which would dilute the GISP,
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also cause confusion within the industry,
and so on,
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and what URISA originally developed
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was a portfolio-based certification,
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meaning that there wasn't an exam.
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You just had to show certain amounts
of experience,
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education,
and professional contributions
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in order to achieve that exam.
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Since the GISCI has taken over
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and been managing this since 2004,
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they have very recently implemented
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an exam onto that certification.
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So who is the GISCI?
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What are these other bodies that
are part of
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the GIS Certification Institute?
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Well, of course, URISA
is one of the founding members,
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so it is part of GISCI.
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We also have the Association
of American Geographers, or AAG.
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We have the University Consortium
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of Geographic Information Science,
or UCGIS.
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We have the Geospatial
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Information and Technology Association,
GITA,
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and the National States
Geographic Information Council,
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or NSGIC, are all members of GISCI.
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So all of these various
GIS-related professional organizations
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have come together to manage,
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promote,
and grow
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the GISP certification,
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so that we don't
have all these competing certifications
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from the various organizations.
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So what that means is,
since the GISP was first introduced,
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we now have over 6,800 active GISPs.
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That was as of August 1, 2018.
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With the new exam cycle just
getting started,
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or probably finishing up, actually,
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we're going to see that number
continue to grow,
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and GISP
is not just a US-centric certification.
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It actually
is an international certification.
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We have GISPs, of course, in the US,
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but we also have them up in Canada,
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in Australia,
in India,
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throughout countries in Europe
and even into Africa.
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So, really,
you can find GISPs worldwide.
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So what are the requirements?
If you wanted to get your GISP,
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what do you have to do?
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Well, first, because it
is a professional certification,
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you must have four years
of full-time equivalent experience,
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meaning you have to have worked
in the profession
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doing GIS work, for at least four years
of full-time equivalency.
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Now, that doesn't mean you just
have to do it in four years.
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You can spread that out.
So, if you only work part-time
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doing GIS, maybe you're a planner,
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and so only half of your time
is spent doing GIS.
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Well, then,
it might take you eight years
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to reach the four year
full-time equivalency,
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but it is still possible.
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You can also count in any internships
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and things where you're working, again,
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maybe in a part-time basis,
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towards that full-time equivalency.
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It's just got to be an equivalent
of four years
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of working full time
on GIS related activities.
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The second component of that
is the portfolio.
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So you have to complete a portfolio
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that shows that you have achieved
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a certain minimal amount of education,
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a certain minimal amount of experience,
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and made professional contributions,
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and we do that on a points scheme.
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So you have
to have achieved a total of 150 points
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spread out across those three areas,
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and in future videos,
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we'll talk more about those specifics
in those three areas
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and what you need to do
to meet those requirements,
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but that will be coming later.
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You also have to agree
to follow a code of ethics
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and a rules of conduct.
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So these are guiding documents
that, kind of, explain
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what you can
and can't do as a GIS professional
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and as of 2015,
you also have to pass an exam.
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So you'll have to go and take that exam.
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It's somewhere around typically
I think, 180 questions.
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You get something like four hours
to complete it, and so on,
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and again, we'll talk more
about the exam in a future video.
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So to actually go through that process,
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you're going to go to the GISCI website
and register.
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So you go there;
you create a user account.
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There is no cost to do that.
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There is no worries.
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You just go on;
you create your user account,
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and that allows you
to begin capturing information
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about your career progress, right?
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So you can go ahead
and start entering in
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information on your education.
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Did you get a degree?
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Did you go take a GIS workshop?
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Those kind of things.
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You can start
putting in your experience.
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You know, I was a GIS technician
at ACME engineers,
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or something like that.
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Again, begin that process
of filling out the portfolio
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and just filling that stuff out,
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again, costs you no money.
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It doesn't start any sort of time ticker
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on when you have to finish things.
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Just by putting that in,
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you're just getting it--
yourself started, right?
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But it doesn't--
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There's no cost.
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No worried about, "Oh, I've got a--
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"I've started my-- my account.
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Now I only have the six years
to complete the process."
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No, that that's not--
you can go in and start now.
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In 10 years from now,
if you think you're ready,
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and you want to start the actual process,
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that's when you do it, right?
You can start doing it.
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Now, once you start the process
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of actually getting certified,
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this is where you
pay the application fee,
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that $100 fee,
and then you either go to take the exam
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or you submit your portfolio for review.
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That starts a clock,
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a six-year window
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in which you
have to complete the entire process.
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So, what we expect,
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or what I think
is probably going to happen?
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For those people just getting
into the GIS field,
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you know, they're coming out of school
with a degree,
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so they're probably going to go
and take that exam first.
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They're going to go ahead,
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while all that knowledge and theory
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that they learned in college
is still fresh in their mind,
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they're going to go pay that $250 fee
to go take the exam.
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Then they have six years
from the time they take that exam
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to go ahead and get the portfolio done,
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getting those four years
of FTE completed,
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getting the other educational--
professional contributions,
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all of those things that
are required, finished,
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and in six years that
should be more than sufficient
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to accomplish all that without a problem.
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So once they've done that,
once they have completed the exam,
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and you've completed the portfolio,
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and you've done it
in that six-year window,
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then you're certified.
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You have earned your GISP certification.
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Of course, once you get it,
you still have to maintain it,
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and there'll be an annual renewal fee
of $95 per year.
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The first year you get certified,
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you don't have to pay the $95.
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It's just every year after that
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and then every three years
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you actually
have to update your portfolio
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to show that you've
met the ongoing education requirements,
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experience requirements,
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and professional
contribution requirements.
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There's no fee
for that recertification,
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because you're paying the annual fee
for renewal,
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but that's just to recertify, to verify
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that you are keeping your credential up,
right?
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That you're making sure that you're
staying up
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on industry trends,
new technologies,
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and those kind of things, right?
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As part of being a professional,
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that's what you have to do.
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So that's the general process of
earning your certification.
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As I said, in future videos,
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we'll talk in greater detail
about all the specific parts,
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like the education requirement
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and experience
and professional contributions
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as well as the exam, but that's
just the basic process for you.
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What GISCI is now working towards
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is accreditation for the GISP.
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When GISP was first developed
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in the late 90s, early 2000s,
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there wasn't a whole lot
of standardization
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or best practices
on how you create a certification.
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You, kind of, took your best stab at it
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and did the best you could
and had your certification.
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Well, since GISP has come along,
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there's actually
been published best practices
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on how you develop a certification.
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How do you grow the certification?
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How do you maintain the certification,
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from several bodies such as
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the National Commission
for Certifying Agencies
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or the Institute
for Credentialing Excellence.
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Of course, ANSI
and ISO also have published guidelines
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along those-- are for certification,
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and GISCI
has been working diligently to align
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the GISP certification with the criteria
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and the best practices of these bodies
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and so their next step for GISP
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is to get it accredited
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by one or more of these bodies,
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which then should add further value
and acceptance
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of the GISP certification.
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So hopefully,
we'll be hearing from GISCI very soon
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on the status of the accreditation
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and achieving the accreditation
for GISP,
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but I said they're working on that,
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and it was something that did not exist
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at the time GISP was first created.
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So there you have it.
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That's pretty much the basics of the GISP
in a nutshell.
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So hopefully you
found some good information from this.
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As I said, we'll have future videos
with more information
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about the GISP as well
as other certifications going forward,
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and of course, remember EGIS Associates.
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We're here to really help you
consume that power of place,
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to make use of spatial technologies
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within your business practices,
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with analysis, and so on, right?
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So we're here.
You need help
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with your enterprise implementation?
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We can do that for you.
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You need systems integration
with other solutions?
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We can help with that.
Strategic planning?
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You know,
with Arc Pro coming down the pike,
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I know a lot of folks
are trying to figure out
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how they're going to implement Arc Pro.
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How does that impact their current data,
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storage,
and workflows?
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So we can certainly help you with that.
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If you need rent-a-tech services
for onsite or remote staff,
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we can do that for you.
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Of course, training and support.
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We're always here to help.
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Well, if you have any questions
about the GISP certification
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or other GIS related certifications,
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please feel free to reach out to us.
Leave a comment down below.
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So hope you've had a good one.
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We look forward to seeing you
in the next video.