Centre of Geographic Sciences

Centre of Geographic Sciences
Established 1948
Principal Jim Stanley
Academic staff 30[1]
Students 400[2]
Location Lawrencetown, Nova Scotia
Campus Annapolis Valley Campus
Former names Nova Scotia Land Survey Institute
Website http://www.cogs.ns.ca/

The Centre of Geographic Sciences (COGS) is located in the village of Lawrencetown, Nova Scotia.

Contents

History

COGS traces its history to 1948 when the Nova Scotia Land Survey Institute (NSLSI) was established by Major J.A.H. Church (Retired) as a training institution for survey and map production. NSLSI became a world leader in geomatics education during the 1970s and 1980s as it evolved into incorporating then-revolutionary technologies such as remote sensing and geographic information systems (GIS). The institute moved into its current campus during this period in the 1970s.

In 1986, NSLSI was renamed the College of Geographic Sciences (COGS) as a publicly funded training college under an act of the Nova Scotia House of Assembly. The name was considered to better reflect the diversity of geographic sciences taught at the NSLSI. The COGS name became synonymous with geomatics training excellence nationally and internationally.

In 1988 the provincial government undertook a much-needed reform to its training colleges and created the Nova Scotia Community College (NSCC) system the following year. While still a separate college, COGS was administratively placed within the NSCC umbrella.

In 1998 NSCC created the Annapolis Valley Campus by administratively combining the geographically separate campuses at Lawrencetown and Middleton. All geomatics advanced diploma programs were grouped under the Centre of Geographic Sciences (COGS), of which the majority are delivered at the Lawrencetown site (as the former Lawrencetown campus is now called).

A proposal to add a third year to the Land Surveying Program, that would allow those who complete it to be exempt from most CBEPS (Canadian Board of Examiners for Professional Surveyors) Exams. This would allow a graduate to go straight to writing their province specific exams to obtain their Land Surveyor's License. The earliest this program could start is the Fall of 2009, as it is interest and CBEPS approval pending.

Organization

COGS is divided into three departments:

Programs

COGS offers 1-year advanced diploma programs in the following disciplines (a Bachelors Degree or higher in any discipline from a recognized University is required, although a Bachelors in geography or computer science is a common background for most students):

COGS also offers 2-year diploma programs in the following disciplines (graduation from high school is a pre-requisite):

COGS also offers a joint M.Sc. with Acadia University through the Master's of Science in Applied Geomatics. A slightly different arrangement is maintained through the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences at Acadia where the department accepts a COGS diploma in lieu of two graduate level Geology courses at the university.

The first graduate of the M.Sc in Applied Geomatics was Koreen Millard

References