I Survived GIST I at Foothill College—And You Should Too

Photo by Gabriela on Unsplash

Let me take you back to the Before Times—specifically December 2019. I was at a Cityworks user conference, not expecting much beyond some coffee, vendor booths, and maybe a few maps. But then it hit me: We could be doing way more with GIS. Like, actually use it to improve operations—not just stare at dashboards.

That moment changed everything.

I went back to the office and pitched a wild idea to the District: fund me to take a GIS course. To my surprise, they said yes. By early 2020, I was enrolled in Foothill College’s Certificate of Achievement in Geographic Information Systems Technology I (GIST I)—and my life hasn’t been the same since.

Why GIST I?

Because it’s not just about maps. It’s about making your data spatially intelligent. GIST I is the perfect launchpad for IT pros, asset managers, or anyone using Cityworks who’s tired of saying, “I wish we could see this on a map.”

Foothill’s GIST I program gives you just enough knowledge to be dangerous (in a good way):

  • GIS software fluency (ArcGIS, QGIS, etc.)
  • Data wrangling and cleanup
  • Map design that actually tells a story
  • Confidence to say “buffer zone” without sweating

Suggested Course Path: How I Did It in 2020

Quarter 1: Laying the Groundwork

  • GIST 11: Introduction to Mapping and Spatial Reasoning (5 units)
    You’ll never look at a map the same again. Promise.
  • GIST 12: Introduction to GIS (5 units)
    ArcGIS is both a blessing and a curse. Learn it anyway.

Quarter 2: Going Deeper

  • GIST 20: Spatial Data Acquisition and Management (4 units)
    From satellites to field data—you’ll learn how it’s all gathered and why accuracy matters.
  • GIST 13: Data Visualization & Cartography (4 units)
    Because nothing ruins good data faster than a bad map.

What I Got Out of It

Besides a shiny certificate? A whole new mindset. I started to see every infrastructure question through a spatial lens:

  • Where are the most frequent service calls?
  • Are we prioritizing maintenance based on geography or guesswork?
  • Can we link GIS to our asset systems better? (Spoiler: YES)

GIST I turned me into the unofficial GIS Admin for the District—and I’m not mad about it.


Who Should Take GIST I?

  • Cityworks users tired of guessing what those layers mean
  • IT professionals looking to expand their utility toolbox
  • Public works and facilities staff who want to stop relying on third-party maps
  • Anyone who’s ever asked, “Why don’t we have a map for this?”

Final Thoughts: From Conference Curiosity to Certified GIS Nerd

That Cityworks conference in December 2019 opened the door. GIST I kicked it wide open. Foothill College made it affordable, flexible, and—dare I say—actually fun.

So yeah, I survived GIST I in 2020. And if you’ve ever stared at a shapefile in confusion, you might want to give it a shot too.

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