Something for GEO Educators this week, an educational webinar from Esri – GEO Jobe’s Admin Tools for ArcGIS Online empowers administrators at higher education institutions to manage large numbers of users, credits, and licenses quickly and easily. Learn how to lower your administrative efforts so you can concentrate on what you love doing – providing instruction and supporting your community so they can succeed in solving spatial problems.
SAVE THE DATE – Thursday, Oct 27 at 2 – 3 PM ET, 11:00 AM – 12:00 PM PDT (6-7 PM GMT).
About the webinar:
Looking for strategies to manage your institution’s ArcGIS Online organization efficiently, without writing custom scripts? GEO Jobe’s Admin Tools for ArcGIS Online empower administrators at higher education institutions to manage large numbers of users, credits, and licenses quickly and easily. Learn how to lower your administrative efforts so you can concentrate on what you love doing – supporting your community so they can succeed in solving spatial problems. You’ll also learn what to do with ArcGIS Online users and their content when individuals move on from your organization. While slanted toward academic instruction settings, the same issues are facing campus facilities users and administrators.
Brendan O’Neill (Esri) Glenn Letham (GEO Jobe) will present an overview of the Admin Tools and share best practices from the Education Community. They’ll also take your questions, so if you have a question, please post it to GeoNet at http://esriurl.com/AGOEduWebinar.
REGISTER AT http://bit.ly/ToolsEduWebinar
Other useful weblinks:
- See more information on GeoNet http://esriurl.com/AGOEduWebinar
- Esri ConnectED – http://www.esri.com/connected
Please do share details of the event via social media using the hashtag #AGOEduWebinar
Suggested Tweet: Esri #AGOEduWebinar – Admin Tools for ArcGIS Online empowers administrators at higher ED orgs. Thurs Oct 27 http://bit.ly/ToolsEduWebinar
#doin some #AGOL Admin tasks and I am so happy we got #AdminTools from @GEOjobeGIS #goodplan #HappyFriday
— Charles The Map Guy (@CharlesRobbins) October 21, 2016