NASA Education Express -- May 3, 2012
Posted on May 03, 2012 02:06:38 PM | Mindi Capp | 0 Comments    |
Check out the following NASA opportunities for the education community. Full descriptions are listed below.

Astronaut Don Pettit Shares Space Physics "Science Off the Sphere" Videos
Audience: All Educators and Students

Free Education Webinar Series from the Aerospace Education Services Project
Audience: K-12 Educators
Event Dates: Various Dates during May 2012

Celebrate Space Day at the National Air and Space Museum
Audience: All Educators and Students
Event Date: May 5, 2012


Engineering Design: Forces and Motion -- Balloon Aerodynamics Challenge Web Seminar
Audience: 6-12 and Informal Educators
Event Date: May 7, 2012

Quadratic Functions: Exploring Space Through Math -- Weightless Wonder Web Seminar
Audience: 9-12 and Informal Educators
Event Date: May 9, 2012

Live Video Chat: How Space Station Research Affects Life on Earth
Audience: Grades 7-12
Event Date: May 11, 2012, 2-3 p.m. EDT

Pre-Service Teacher Institutes at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center
Audience: Higher Education Students
Application Deadline: May 11, 2012
Institute Dates: July 14-27, 2012

For High School Juniors and Seniors: 2012 Lunabotics University/College Recruitment Fair
Audience: 9-12 Students
Application Deadline: May 11, 2012
Event Date: May 26, 2012

2012-2013 National Student Solar Spectrograph Competition
Audience: Higher Education Educators and Students
Deadline to register and apply for build awards: Sept. 30, 2012

What's New at NASA's Space Place Website
Audience: K-6 Educators

Additional Frequently Asked Questions -- NASA Research Announcement (NRA) Competitive Program for Science Museums and Planetariums Plus Opportunities for NASA Visitor Centers and Other Informal Education Institutions (CP4SMP+) (Announcement Number: NNH11ZHA004N, Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) Number: 43.008) -- Available For Download
Audience: Informal Education Institutions

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Astronaut Don Pettit Shares Space Physics "Science Off the Sphere" Videos

NASA astronaut and Expedition 31 crew member Don Pettit continues to examine how microgravity affects scientific principles through “Science Off the Sphere,” a video series featuring unique physics experiments performed on the International Space Station using everyday objects.

NASA and the American Physical Society, or APS, have partnered to share the videos with students, educators and science fans around the world.

In the short, downloadable videos, Pettit has used knitting needles and water droplets to examine static electricity, demonstrated capillary flow by creating a zero-gravity tea cup, used thin water films to experiment with fluid motion, shared infrared imagery of Earth and more.

APS, the professional society for physicists, shares new "Science Off the Sphere" videos every other Thursday on its outreach website, Physics Central. The website also features educational content on the physics topics demonstrated in space by Pettit and facilitates a physics-oriented challenge based on the experiments. APS reviews the responses and identifies a winner, who is recognized by Pettit in a future installment.

For more information and to view the science demonstrations, visit: http://www.physicscentral.com/sots.


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Free Education Webinar Series from the Aerospace Education Services Project

The Aerospace Education Services Project is presenting a series of free webinars through May 2012. All webinars can be accessed online. Join aerospace education specialists to learn about activities, lesson plans, educator guides and resources to bring NASA into your classroom.

NASA and Education Resource Access (Grades K-12)
May 3, 2012, 3:30 - 4:30 p.m. EDT
Aerospace education specialist Sonya Williams will explain NASA's mission directorates and their purposes. Learn about the K-12 educational materials created by each of the directorates and how educators can access these materials free of charge. Learn about citizen science opportunities, student design challenges and many other NASA resources that educators can incorporate into their classrooms.

Animals in Space (Grades K-5)
May 3, 2012, 7 - 8 p.m. EDT
Aerospace education specialist Wil Robertson will demonstrate how teachers can use stuffed animals as props in telling the story of the animals that preceded humans in space. The program is geared for teachers in K-5 with a special focus of aligning the topic with the Core Literacy Standards for elementary grades. Web resources will be provided.

Animals in Space (Grades K-5)
May 5, 2012, 9 - 10 a.m. EDT
Aerospace education specialist Wil Robertson will demonstrate how teachers can use stuffed animals as props in telling the story of the animals that preceded humans in space. The program is geared for teachers in K-5 with a special focus of aligning the topic with the Core Literacy Standards for elementary grades. Web resources will be provided.

Food for Thought: Space Food and Nutrition in the Classroom (Grades 4-9)
May 5, 2012, 11 a.m. - noon EDT
Aerospace education specialist Steve Culivan will share "Food for Thought," a new NASA educator guide designed to explore space food and the nutritional needs of astronauts that includes a menu of inquiry activities and other resources to address this exciting topic.

Rocket Scientists Write? (Grades K-12)
May 7, 2012, 6 - 7 p.m. EDT

Aerospace education specialist John Weis will demonstrate language arts activities using NASA materials and lessons found within NASA educator guides. Materials discussed will cover reading comprehension and composition for grades K-12. Lesson plans and strategies will be shared.

NASA's S'COOL Program (Grades 4-12)
May 8, 2012, 3:30 - 4:30 p.m.
Aerospace education specialist Les Gold will introduce NASA's Students' Cloud Observations On-Line, or S'COOL, program. The program engages students to make observations of cloud type and cover and then share it with NASA. Scientists use the data to assist their understanding of global climate change. After sending in observations, teachers receive satellite images for comparison to student data.

Free Planetarium Program for Your Computer (Grades K-12)
May 15, 2012, 3:30 - 4:30 p.m.
Aerospace education specialist Les Gold will introduce participants to a free planetarium program. Participants will learn how to use the program to demonstrate day/night cycles, the sun's changing position in the sky, as well as seasons, phases of the moon, constellations and more.

Looking at Our Earth From Above (Grades 4-9)
May 15, 2012, 6 - 7 p.m.
Aerospace education specialist Steve Culivan will integrate science, technology, engineering, mathematics and geography, or STEM-G, with Earth observations, remote sensing and maps. NASA curriculum products, missions and other resources will be utilized to demonstrate an inquiry-based teaching strategy to better understand Earth and the processes that shape it.

Mars Uncovered: Revealing the Geologic History of Mars (Grades 5-12)
May 16, 2012, 7:30 - 8:30 p.m.

Aerospace education specialist Tony Leavitt will share an inquiry-based lesson that presents a critical-thinking approach of studying the surface of Mars. This process is similar to the approach used by NASA scientists. This lesson will teach students to examine geologic features of a planetary surface and use relative-age dating techniques to analyze the information and interpret the geologic history.

Rocket Scientists Write? (Grades K-12)
May 21, 2012, 6 - 7 p.m. EDT

Aerospace education specialist John Weis will demonstrate language arts activities using NASA materials and lessons found within NASA educator guides. Materials discussed will cover reading comprehension and composition for grades K-12. Lesson plans and strategies will be shared.

Toys in Space (Grades 4-9)
May 24, 2012, 7 - 8 p.m. EDT

Aerospace education specialist Steve Culivan will share NASA's Toys in Space videos and activities. In this program, astronauts took toys from around the world with them into space. Students predict, observe and record how the toys behave without the effects of Earth's gravity, putting Newton's Laws of Motion to the test. Participants will receive copies of the astronaut videos for use in the classroom.

Sun-Earth-Moon Relationships (Grades K-8)
May 24, 2012, 7 - 8 p.m. EDT

Aerospace education specialist Rick Varner will introduce sun-Earth-moon models that help to explain the phases of the moon and both lunar and solar eclipses. Additionally, the activity "Kinesthetic Astronomy" will be introduced for its explanation of the seasons.

For more information about these webinars, and to see a full list of webinars taking place through June 2012, visit http://neon.psu.edu/webinars/.

Questions about this series of webinars should be directed to Gwendolyn Wheatle at Gwendolyn.H.Wheatle@nasa.gov.

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Celebrate Space Day at the National Air and Space Museum

Celebrate Space Day at the National Air and Space Museum, on Saturday, May 5, 2012. This event is sponsored by Lockheed Martin.

Space Day is an annual favorite at the National Air and Space Museum. Visitors enjoy hands-on activities; meet NASA astronauts, scientists and engineers; find out how space suits are made; design a mission patch; and learn about space from museum experts.

Visit the Museum’s National Mall building in Washington, D.C. to see the Buzz Lightyear action figure that flew in space. Or get an up-close look at space shuttle Discovery at the Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, Va.

For a list of scheduled events, visit http://www.nasm.si.edu/events/dateRange.cfm?date=5/5/2012.


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Engineering Design: Forces and Motion -- Balloon Aerodynamics Challenge Web Seminar

As part of a series of electronic professional development experiences for educators, the NASA Explorer Schools project and the National Science Teachers Association are hosting a 90-minute live professional development Web seminar for educators on May 7, 2012, at 6:30 p.m. EDT. This Web seminar will introduce the Forces and Motion: Balloon Aerodynamics Challenge for students. This activity provides first-hand information about density, neutral buoyancy and drag, which is then used to solve a problem. The activity provides many opportunities for incorporating national mathematics, science and technology learning standards into your curriculum.

For more information and to register online, visit http://learningcenter.nsta.org/products/symposia_seminars/NES2/webseminar23.aspx.

To learn more about the NASA Explorer Schools project, visit http://explorerschools.nasa.gov.

Email any questions about this opportunity to the NES Help Desk at NASA.Explorer.Schools@mail.nasa.gov.


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Quadratic Functions: Exploring Space Through Math -- Weightless Wonder

As part of a series of electronic professional development experiences for educators, the NASA Explorer Schools project is hosting a 60-minute Web seminar on May 9, 2012, at 8 p.m. EDT. Investigate the characteristics of quadratic functions to solve real-world problems involving the parabolic flight path of NASA's Weightless Wonder C-9 jet. Get an overview of a student investigation, solve related quadratic equations and evaluate and graph quadratic functions. A graphing calculator will be used to demonstrate concepts; however, you do not need a calculator for this professional development seminar.

For more information and to register online, visit
https://digitalmedia.wufoo.com/forms/nes-webinar-registration-quadratic-functions/.

To learn more about the NASA Explorer Schools project, visit http://explorerschools.nasa.gov.

Email any questions about this opportunity to NASA-Explorer-Schools@mail.nasa.gov
.

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Live Video Chat: How Space Station Research Affects Life on Earth

The NASA Explorer Schools project is offering students in grades 7-12 an opportunity to ask questions of Tara Ruttley, the associate program scientist for the International Space Station. Join the video chat on May 11, 2012, from 2-3 p.m. EDT. Ruttley will answer questions submitted during this live video chat about conducting research on the space station and the benefits of this research to astronauts living and working in space and to life on Earth.

Students do not need to be in a school participating in the NASA Explorer Schools project in order to ask questions during this video chat.

Submit questions during the chat through a chat window, or send them to NASA-Explorer-Schools@mail.nasa.gov.

To learn more about NES, visit the explorerschools.nasa.gov website.

For more information and to view the video chat, visit http://www.nasa.gov/offices/education/programs/national/nes2/home/research-ruttley-chat.html.

If you have any questions about the video chat, contact NASA-Explorer-Schools@mail.nasa.gov.


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Pre-Service Teacher Institutes at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center

NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center has partnered with Oakwood University to offer a two-week Pre-Service Teacher Institute taking place July 14-27, 2012, in Huntsville, Ala. This residential session is for education majors preparing to teach grades 4-8.

Participants will engage in hands-on learning experiences designed to develop their skills for teaching science, technology, engineering and mathematics using NASA-developed curriculum resources. Full-time undergraduate students in their junior or senior year at minority institutions are invited to apply. Housing, meals, travel assistance and a stipend will be provided.

Applications must be postmarked by May 11, 2012.

For more information, visit http://www.nasa.gov/education/msfc/psti.

Please email any questions about this opportunity to Marilyn Lewis at marilyn.h.lewis@nasa.gov.

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For High School Juniors and Seniors: 2012 Lunabotics University/College Recruitment Fair

As part of NASA’s Third Annual Lunabotics Mining Competition, a University/College Recruitment Fair will be held on May 26, 2012, at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Top colleges and universities from across the U.S. will be at the fair to share information about science, technology, engineering and mathematics opportunities at their schools. NASA scientists and engineers will be available to answer questions about specific majors and technical career paths.

Students interested in attending this free recruitment fair are asked to register online before May 11, 2012. To register, visit http://www.secorstrategies.com/nasa-lunabotics.

Inquiries about this event should be directed to Mary Baker at Mary@SecorStrategies.com.

To learn more about NASA's Lunabotics Mining Competition, visit www.nasa.gov/lunabotics.


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2012-2013 National Student Solar Spectrograph Competition

The National Student Solar Spectrograph Competition is the Montana Space Grant Consortium’s Education Program for NASA’s Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph, or IRIS, mission. IRIS will use spectrography and imaging in ultraviolet wavelengths to reveal the dynamics of the sun’s chromospheres and transition region.

This yearly competition is open to undergraduate interdisciplinary teams from colleges and universities across the U.S. Teams are challenged to design and build a working ground-based solar spectrograph and demonstrate the capabilities of the spectrograph as defined by their science goal. Typical teams have three to six students and must have a faculty advisor.

Both substantial scholarship prizes and travel prizes will be given in four categories: best design, best build, best science observations and best presentation of results. Teams may apply for funding of $2,000 per team for project materials. Priority for build funds will be given to minority-serving institutions, community colleges and institutions with less aerospace activity.

Applications for build awards and registrations are due on Sept. 30, 2012.

The competition will be held in Bozeman, Mont., in May 2013.

For more information and to register online, visit http://www.spacegrant.montana.edu/IRIS/index.html.

Please email any questions about this competition to Randy Larimer at rlarimer@ece.montana.edu.


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What's New at NASA's Space Place Website

The Space Place is a NASA website for elementary school-aged kids, their teachers and their parents.

     Space is harsh! It’s vicious!
     It reminds us every day.
     There‛s heat and cold and sun that blasts
     All objects in its way,
     The zero-g, no gravity!
     A galactic cosmic ray!
     And not a whiff of air to breathe.
     Nor guide to show the way.

At the Space Place, we have plenty to remind you of the nature of nature when you leave Mother Earth.

New at spaceplace.nasa.gov
It was a dark and stormy August night in 1859 … solar stormy, that is. A solar storm caused such bright Northern Lights that gold miners in the Rockies were frying up bacon and eggs at 1 a.m. thinking the sun was up.

Violent storms on the sun blast out charged particles and radiation that can damage satellites, power grids, and communication and navigation systems. In the new game “Shields Up!” you are in charge of protecting three satellites by putting them into safe mode whenever bad stuff is coming their way. The Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite – R Series, or GOES-R, monitors the sun’s surface and warns the other satellites when they need to get ready for the worst.

Put your "Shields Up!" and save those satellites at http://spaceplace.nasa.gov/shields-up.

Space Place en Español
Black Hole Rescue!,
en español, is a challenging game in which you must spell out black-hole-related vocabulary words by clicking on moving letter tiles that have been dropped into a swirling vortex of matter that is slowly being devoured by a black hole. Talk about a harsh environment. So time is of the essence!

This is a good language arts game for Spanish speakers or learners. Accented letters must be matched too. No substituting an “n” for an “ñ” or an “e” for an “é.” Rescue words from the black hole at http://spaceplace.nasa.gov/sp/black-hole-rescue.

New Space Place "Listmania®"
“Customers who bought this item also bought . . .” is a common marketing ploy on popular retail websites. Well, The Space Place team knows a good idea when we see one, and we are not above borrowing. You will now find recommendations at the bottom of every Space Place article, game or activity. There’s a lot of cross-pollination on the site, so these suggestions should help visitors deepen their appreciation for any topic that engages their interest.

For the Classroom
What’s the weirdest, most alien place you can imagine? Well, no matter how extreme your imaginary world, there’s probably something like it somewhere in the universe, probably in our own galaxy. Even our own solar system has some real doozies. Methane rain on Saturn’s moon Titan? Crushing pressures in Jupiter’s atmosphere? A surface hot enough to melt lead on Venus? So, how do space scientists and engineers know what kinds of science instruments (cameras, spectrometers, etc.) to put on spacecraft that are destined for one of these strange places? The classroom activity “Designing for the Barely Imaginable” explains these planetary science instruments as extensions of our five senses, with each type of instrument analogous to eyes, ears, noses, etc. The activity invites students to imagine and describe an alien world, then design a pretend mission to explore that world and give the results! This activity involves engineering design, physics, earth science and language arts. Find it at http://spaceplace.nasa.gov/classroom-activities/#alienworld.

For out-of-school time
Here’s a classic physics experiment with a space exploration twist. Crush an aluminum can without even touching it. This version of the activity is presented in the context of testing a new spacecraft material. How would this material work in the harsh vacuum of space? The activity requires pouring a small amount of boiling water into an empty soft-drink can, which an adult can do, but the rest is very doable by a child. And the result is a dramatic demonstration (and explanation) of atmospheric pressure. It makes it look as if we ourselves withstand a measure of harshness under the weight of our own atmosphere. It’s at http://spaceplace.nasa.gov/soda-can-test.

Special Days

May 2, 1953: First Commercial Jet Flight
Why can't we just fly into space? Read about a rocket that hitches an airplane ride for part of the trip to space. http://spaceplace.nasa.gov/galex-pegasus.

May 17: Pack Rat Day
You can't afford to be a pack rat when you are packing for a trip to Mars. Try this fun, geometry-oriented activity for your class. http://spaceplace.nasa.gov/classroom-activities/#marspacking

May 18, 1980: Mount St. Helens Erupted, Completely Blowing Off Its Top
Volcanoes look amazing from space. See Mount St. Helens and others at http://spaceplace.nasa.gov/gallery-earth/#volcanos.

June 5: World Environment Day
How are satellites helping us understand and care for the environment? One way is by tracking migrating endangered animals. http://spaceplace.nasa.gov/migration

June 15: Nature Photography Day
Kids can make their own cameras and take awesome nature pictures while learning about light. http://spaceplace.nasa.gov/classroom-activities/#pinhole

June 16, 1914: Birthday of Lyman Spitzer, Jr.
He was a great scientist, and the Spitzer Space Telescope is named for him. Read how it was invented to make a dream come true. http://spaceplace.nasa.gov/story-lucy

And another thing…
If you are taking a vacation from the classroom, have a wonderful, restorative summer. Before you let those kids go, however, remind them to visit The Space Place in between their other screen-related activities!


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Additional Frequently Asked Questions -- NASA Research Announcement (NRA) Competitive Program for Science Museums and Planetariums Plus Opportunities for NASA Visitor Centers and Other Informal Education Institutions (CP4SMP+) (Announcement Number: NNH11ZHA004N, Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) Number: 43.008) -- Available For Download

Four Frequently Asked Questions received after the proposal due date have been added to the CP4SMP+ portal page on NSPIRES at the following URL:

http://nspires.nasaprs.com/external/solicitations/summary.do?method=init&solId=%7b75AAC7BF-2F69-6C73-2980-B1DCF25EA665%7d&path=closed

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Don't miss out on education-related opportunities available from NASA. For a full list of Current Opportunities, visit http://www.nasa.gov/audience/foreducators/current-opps-index.html.

Visit NASA Education on the Web:

For Educators: http://www.nasa.gov/audience/foreducators/index.html
For Students: http://www.nasa.gov/audience/forstudents/index.html
NASA Kids’ Club: http://www.nasa.gov/kidsclub


Tags : Education Websites, Educational Resources, Opportunities for Educators, Student Competitions, Webcasts  

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