NASA And Optimus Prime Collaborate To Educate Youth

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Sep. 29, 2010

Sonja Alexander 
Headquarters, Washington      
202-358-1761 
sonja.r.alexander@xxxxxxxx 

Rani Gran/Darryl Mitchell 
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. 
301-286-2483/5169 
rani.c.gran@xxxxxxxx 
darryl.r.mitchell@xxxxxxxx 




RELEASE: 10-230

NASA AND OPTIMUS PRIME COLLABORATE TO EDUCATE YOUTH

WASHINGTON -- NASA has developed a contest to raise students' 
awareness of technology transfer efforts and how NASA technologies 
contribute to our everyday lives. 

NASA is collaborating with Hasbro using the correlation between the 
popular TRANSFORMERS brand, featuring its leader Optimus Prime, and 
spinoffs from NASA technologies created for aeronautics and space 
missions that are used here on Earth. The goal is to help students 
understand that NASA technology 'transforms' into things that are 
used daily. These 'transformed' technologies include water purifiers, 
medical imaging software, or fabric that protects against UV rays. 

The Innovative Partnerships Program Office at NASA's Goddard Space 
Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., in conjunction with NASA's Office of 
Education, has designed a video contest for students from third to 
eighth grade. Each student, or group of students, will submit a 
three- to five-minute video on a selected NASA spinoff technology 
listed in the 2009 Spinoff publication. Videos must demonstrate an 
understanding of the NASA spinoff technology and the associated NASA 
mission, as well as the commercial application and public benefit 
associated with the "transformed" technology. Video entries are due 
by December 31. 

The videos will be posted on the NASA YouTube channel, and the public 
will be responsible for the first round of judging. The top five 
submissions from each of the two grade groups (third-fifth and 
sixth-eighth) will advance for final judging. A NASA panel will 
select a winning entry from each group, and the students will receive 
a glass Optimus Prime Spinoff Award at the Space Foundation's 
National Space Symposium in 2011. The innovators of the NASA 
technology highlighted in the winning videos also will receive 
trophies, along with their commercial partners. 

For more information, visit the Optimus Prime Spinoff Award web site: 



http://ipp.gsfc.nasa.gov/optimus 


For more information about NASA's Innovative Partnerships Program, 
visit: 



http://ipp.nasa.gov 


For more information about NASA's Spinoff publication, visit: 



http://www.sti.nasa.gov/tto 


NASA's YouTube Channel is at: 



http://www.youtube.com/user/NASAtelevision 

	
-end-



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