Melanie Colón Posted March 27, 2017 Share Posted March 27, 2017 Graduate/Professional Training at Smithsonian-Mason School of ConservationThe Smithsonian-Mason School of Conservation offers unique, intensive residential training courses hosted in our sustainably-built Academic Center on the grounds of Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute in Front Royal, Virginia, USA. Continuing education/graduate credits. May-October 2017 schedule below: visit http://SMConservation.gmu.edu for more information about each course.Field Recording and Analysis of Biological Sounds for Research and Conservationhttp://smconservation.gmu.edu/programs/graduate-and-professional/professional-training-courses/field-recording-and-analysis-of-biological-sounds-for-research-and-conservation/>May 1-12, 2017-NEW COURSE!!Spaces still available: Applications accepted until MARCH 30-Apply NOW!!Acoustic recording and monitoring now are mainstream tools for biological research and conservation, used to explore biology of acoustically active animals in both terrestrial and aquatic environments. Recording equipment and software for analyzing animal sounds are readily available, but few opportunities exist for biologists to learn appropriate use of the equipment and software together. This course fills that training gap. In two-weeks of long field-and-lab days, participants make and document high-quality recordings under varying conditions and address research and conservation questions by using acoustic analysis software to visualize/extract recording information. Collaboratively taught by Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Smithsonian, and George Mason researchers, participants learn practical techniques for acquiring and analyzing animal sound recordings under real-world field conditions. This hands-on training focuses on bioacoustics, principally with Raven Pro sound analysis software (course fee includes student license): course modules also discuss soundscape theory, the emerging field of ecological acoustics, and other acoustics software platforms.Essentials of Open Source GIShttp://smconservation.gmu.edu/programs/graduate-and-professional/professional-training-courses/essentials-of-open-source-gis/>June 5-9, 2017Spaces still available-Apply Now!GIS, GPS, satellite imagery, and mapping are essentials in the toolboxes of researchers, natural resource managers, and conservationists. However, the use of these technologies is often limited because of a lack of access to expensive and specialized software. This one-week course focuses on freely available open-source GIS software and tools that can be modified and freely redistributed. Combining lectures with computer tutorials, the course covers essential concepts, quickly and effectively getting practitioners started with open-source geospatial analysis tools, including QGIS and R.Stakeholder-Driven Scenario Models for Strategic Conservation Planninghttp://smconservation.gmu.edu/programs/graduate-and-professional/professional-training-courses/stakeholder-driven-scenario-models-for-strategic-conservation-planning/>September 11-16, 2017-NEW COURSE!!The Scenario planning approach allows us to imagine how land use decisions we make today could influence the landscape of tomorrow. Storylines developed by stakeholders, scenarios describe potential alternate futures. If linked to land use, socio-economic, and environmental data, scenarios can help identify trade-offs or synergies between environmental health and human well-being. Project-based, this 6-day modeling course provides a conceptual and practical understanding of the intersection of scenario planning and land use modeling in the planning context.Additional Upcoming Courses:* Practical Zoo Nutrition Managementhttp://smconservation.gmu.edu/programs/graduate-and-professional/professional-training-courses/nutrition/> (June 5-9, 2017: Full-no longer accepting 2017 applications)* Camera Trapping Study Design and Data Analysis for Occupancy and Density Estimationhttp://smconservation.gmu.edu/programs/graduate-and-professional/professional-training-courses/cameratraps/> (June 19-30, 2017)* Ecology and Conservation of Migratory Birdshttp://smconservation.gmu.edu/programs/graduate-and-professional/professional-training-courses/species-monitoring-and-conservation-bird-migration/> (September 18-29, 2017)* Spatial Ecology, Geospatial Analysis & Remote Sensing for Conservationhttp://smconservation.gmu.edu/programs/graduate-and-professional/professional-training-courses/mccs-0500-spatial-ecology-geospatial-analysis-and-remote-sensing-for-conservation/> (October 16-27, 2017)Check out Smithsonian's Earth Optimism Summit, April 21-23, 2017: https://earthoptimism.si.edu/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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