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Tell a Teacher or School about Esri's Free ArcGIS Online Organizational Account

Esri’s ConnectED Contribution: One Year On, One Year Strong

Just over a year ago, Esri answered President Barack Obama’s call to join the ConnectEDinitiative, an effort to help all students in kindergarten through the twelfth grade in the United States become effective digital learners.

President Obama asked private businesses to contribute technology such as computers and tablets, Internet connectivity, software, learning resources, and training for educators. Esri president Jack Dangermond offered every K –12 school in the United States—public, private, or home school—a free ArcGIS Online organizational account and accompanying instructional materials. Amazon Web Services, which provides essential infrastructure in ArcGIS Online, generously stepped up to help.

More than 1,000 schools have acquired free ArcGIS online accounts
More than 1,000 schools have acquired free ArcGIS Online accounts.

Students can use the tools in ArcGIS Online to analyze data and make maps—instilling spatial-thinking skills that will help them with their school research projects and in their future careers. The specially configured ArcGIS Online organizational accounts offer what businesses, governments, and agencies around the world increasingly find valuable: a custom portal, galaxies of data, and a fleet of applications simple enough for grade school students to use yet robust enough for mission-critical or scientific work. Students and professionals use ArcGIS Online to build, host, and share content in a safe and secure environment.

More than 1,000 schools in the United States have acquired free accounts, including Crookston High School in Crookston, Minnesota; Winfield Middle School in Winfield, West Virginia; Dunsmuir Elementary School in Dunsmuir, California; Alianza Academy in Salt Lake City, Utah; and all 80 Loudoun County Public Schools sites in Loudon County, Virginia. (View the Esri Story Map to see if a school near you is participating.)

Children are using ArcGIS Online to track butterflies and whales, map great literature and local history, determine earthquake hot spots, monitor signs of climate change, and much more. They also can use ArcGIS Online to share results of their work. The technology helps students explore the multiple factors that influence complex issues, and then make decisions and solve problems—just like adults do.

In the digital world, this is what students need most: experience in solving ill-defined problems, managing large inputs of data, asking questions about that data to uncover patterns, synthesizing information, and communicating the meaning of what was discovered.

Students discover patterns and relationships in data
Students discover patterns and relationships in data.

ArcGIS Online will help them do that and more.

Educators long to breathe life into material in the form of projects, which are like “educational Velcro,” holding students’ focus and bringing together scattered collections of numbers, concepts, and places. Education is not delivery but engagement, and projects let students make an investment in learning, follow their ideas, innovate, create, and share.

Web-based mapping via ArcGIS Online means that students can work on their projects using any connected device, anytime, anywhere. They can create, work with, and share maps from a tablet computer at home, a classmate’s smartphone, or a Mac-, Windows-, or Chrome-based computer at school.

11th grade student in Los Angeles uses Esri technology
An 11th grade student in Los Angeles uses Esri technology to study demographics.

Web-based mapping via ArcGIS Online means that students can work on their projects using any connected device, anytime, anywhere. They can create, work with, and share maps from a tablet computer at home, a classmate’s smartphone, or a Mac-, Windows-, or Chrome-based computer at school.

Fourth graders classify and symbolize their data
Fourth graders in Springdale, Arkansas, classify and symbolize their data.

With this rapidly evolving technology, educators need GeoMentors to show them what’s possible, get the ball rolling, and help explain how they can take advantage of ArcGIS Online organizational accounts. Resources include easy-to-use introductions that will help students get started on their learning quests using mapping technology.

Please help educators engage their students in activities that build curiosity, critical thinking, and other skills that will last a lifetime. Spread the word about the free ArcGIS Online organizational accounts. Visit esri.com/ConnectED for more information.

About the author

Charlie Fitzpatrick was the K–12 education manager at Esri. After being a formal student for many years, he taught social studies in grades seven through 12 (mostly eighth grade geography) for 15 years. He also started teaching teachers to understand the patterns, relationships, and systems of the world using computers. He joined Esri as an education manager in 1992, where he worked with students, educators, and influencers across the nation.