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KPMS launches last year of NASA program
By Rodika Tollefson
KP News
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Astronaut Col. T J
Cramer talks about current
and future exploration projects at the KPMS
NASA assembly.
Photo by Mindi LaRose |
The Key
Peninsula Middle School entered its last year as part of
the NASA Explorer program with a variety of exciting
opportunities for both students and staff. Several teams
throughout the year will participate in activities
ranging from teacher leadership conferences to flying in
a low-gravity aircraft with a student-designed
experiment.
KPMS
became the first NASA Explorer school in Washington
state, thanks to the innovation of science teacher
Kareen Borders, who applied for the highly competitive
grant. As part of the three-year partnership program,
which started during the school year 2004-05, the school
participated in a variety of NASA-sponsored activities
that included frequent visits by astronauts, trips by
student or teacher teams to NASA facilities to
participate in training and experiments, and cash grants
that allowed the school to purchase videoconferencing,
robotics and science equipment.
“It has
engaged kids in science, technology, engineering and
math — there’s been some incredibly high-interest
investigations and opportunities for teacher
professional development we would not have been able to
do without NASA,” Borders said. “Some kids were inspired
to explore science and aerospace careers.”

VIP guests in the school’s library before the
ceremony.
Photo by Mindi LaRose |
And that
is exactly what NASA hopes to achieve — inspire the next
generation of explorers and show youngsters some real
application of math and science. “It’s important to show
(students) the reasons for studying science,” astronaut
Col. T.J. Cramer said in an interview before the
school’s NASA kick-off assembly at the end of October.
“This is the generation that will be doing the future
NASA projects.” He said that part of his goal during his
presentations at various schools is to inspire the
younger generation “that by thinking outside of the box
you can progress farther toward your dream.”
Cramer,
who works at the Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center in
Houston, told the assembly audience, which included
local civic leaders and dignitaries: “I’ve seen a lot of
schools… and spoke to a lot of schools, and let me tell
you right now, this is absolutely the best,
inspirational and (full of) enthusiasm.”

KPMS students greet the VIP guests arriving for
the
assembly.
Photo by Mindi LaRose |
In his
presentation about NASA, Cramer made a link between
science fiction writers and scientific discoveries,
pointing out that technology such as radar and the laser
“were first described accurately in science fiction.”
“People
were thinking for a long time outside the box, ahead,
trying to predict what will happen,” he said.
KPMS
students have had various opportunities to think outside
the box as part of their NASA activities. Several KPMS
student experiments were selected by the aerospace
agency through a competitive process. The latest,
testing the impact of microgravity on the reaction rate
between vinegar and soda, will be taken on a DC-9
low-gravity flight by a small team of teachers and
students. The two students, PHS senior and KPMS alum
John DeLeo, and KPMS/PHS alum Brett Knisely who is now a
college sophomore, will not fly on the DC-9, but as the
ground crew will do everything else alongside the
teachers.

Astronaut TJ Cramer talks to
students about his NASA
experiences.
Photo by Mindi LaRose |
“Just
getting the school geared up and students involved will
be the most exciting part (of the project),” said one of
the teachers who will fly in that aircraft, Kathy
Tucker, who teaches math at KPMS.
In
addition, other teachers will participate in a five-day
weather-investigation program in Yellowstone and in
national math and science conventions. For aerospace
students, robotics, NASA videocasts, and space shuttle
pilot panels are among this year’s activities. Later in
the year, middle schoolers will also lead NASA
activities at the elementary schools.
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NASA Family Night
All KPMS families are invited to
attend
the NASA Family Night on Jan. 3,
from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. at the school.
Activities will include robotics, a planetarium,
and presentations by NASA scientists and
the school’s microgravity team.
Dinner will be provided. |
One of
this year’s goals is to create a sustainability plan so
the school can continue its space exploration activities
once the grant expires at the end of this school year.
Borders is on NASA’s national committee that is
discussing the idea of a program in which Explorer
School “graduates” can become mentor schools. She also
continues to look for other opportunities. Recently, she
applied and received a grant from the National Gardening
Association for a hydroponics activity. KPMS was one of
12 schools selected nationwide.
School
Principal Sharon Shaffer, summed up the impact of the
Explorer program on the school at the NASA assembly:
“The NASA program has provided inspiration for us here…
As a school, we continue to shoot for the stars.”
For more pictures from the NASA assembly, please visit
our Photo Gallery
page.
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