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Courses related to this or similar occupations:
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If you are interested in this occupation, then these CAO courses may also be of interest. Note that these course suggestions are not intended to indicate that they lead directly to this occupation, only that they are related in some way and may be worth exploring.
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12 courses found.
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Typical tasks undertaken in this profession: 23
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Verify the accuracy of survey data including measurements and calculations conducted at survey sites. |
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Search legal records, survey records, and land titles to obtain information about property boundaries in areas to be surveyed. |
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Calculate heights, depths, relative positions, property lines, and other characteristics of terrain. |
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Prepare and maintain sketches, maps, reports, and legal descriptions of surveys to describe, certify, and assume liability for work performed. |
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Direct or conduct surveys to establish legal boundaries for properties, based on legal deeds and titles. |
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Prepare or supervise preparation of all data, charts, plots, maps, records, and documents related to surveys. |
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Write descriptions of property boundary surveys for use in deeds, leases, or other legal documents. |
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Compute geodetic measurements and interpret survey data to determine positions, shapes, and elevations of geomorphic and topographic features. |
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Determine longitudes and latitudes of important features and boundaries in survey areas using theodolites, transits, levels, and satellite-based global positioning systems (GPS). |
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Record the results of surveys including the shape, contour, location, elevation, and dimensions of land or land features. |
JobZone
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| Education Most of these occupations require qualifications at NFQ Levels 7 or 8 (Ordinary / Honours Degrees) but some do not.
Related Experience A considerable amount of work-related skill, knowledge, or experience is needed for these occupations. For example, an engineer must complete four years of college and work for several years in engineering to be considered qualified.
Job Training Employees in these occupations usually need several years of work-related experience, on-the-job training, and/or vocational training.
Job Zone Examples Many of these occupations involve coordinating, supervising, managing, or training others. Examples include accountants, sales managers, computer programmers, teachers, chemists, environmental engineers, criminal investigators, and financial analysts. |
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