NASA Announces Spaced Out Sports Challenge Winners

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April 05, 2011

Ann Marie Trotta 
Headquarters, Washington      
202-358-1601 
ann.marie.trotta@xxxxxxxx 

Rebecca Strecker 
Stennis Space Center, Bay St. Louis, Miss. 
228-688-3249 
rebecca.a.strecker@xxxxxxxx   


RELEASE: 11-101

NASA ANNOUNCES SPACED OUT SPORTS CHALLENGE WINNERS

BAY ST. LOUIS, Miss. -- NASA has announced three winners in the Spaced 
Out Sports competition, which challenged U.S. students in fifth 
through eighth grades to create games for astronauts to play aboard 
the International Space Station. The challenge is part of a broader 
agency education effort to engage students in science, technology, 
engineering and mathematics (STEM) activities. 

Students at K.W. Barrett Elementary School in Arlington, Va., got the 
top prize for creating a game entitled "Save the World." Second-place 
honors went to students at Kinser Elementary School, a Department of 
Defense Education Activity (DoDEA) School in Okinawa, Japan, for 
their "Alligator Clip Capture" game. Third-place was awarded to 
students at Manhattan Beach Middle School in Manhattan Beach, Calif., 
for their "Independence Day" game. 

"Save the World" features teams gathering objects and building devices 
to save Earth from incoming meteorites. In "Alligator Clip Capture," 
players race around the station's Destiny Lab retrieving alligator 
clips of varying point values. "Independence Day" challenges players 
to throw batons through 'Liberty Rings' to gain points. All three 
games will be played aboard the station. 

"I was delighted to see this level of engagement from the student 
teams, and I want to congratulate all three winning teams on their 
hard work and creativity," said NASA Associate Administrator for 
Education Leland Melvin. "I am especially pleased to note that one of 
the winning teams is from a DoDEA school. April is the Month of the 
Military Child, and NASA is kicking off a new initiative to engage 
military families in our education programs." 

NASA will kick off its Military Families Initiative at an education 
summit in Orlando later this month. 

The Spaced Out Sports challenge, a Teaching from Space project, was 
unveiled last fall and focused on helping students learn and apply 
Sir Isaac Newton's Laws of Motion. Using the accompanying curriculum, 
teachers led students through a study of Newton's laws, highlighted 
by hands-on activities and video podcasts featuring NASA scientists 
and engineers explaining how the laws are used in the space program. 

The videos also feature celebrity athletes explaining the science 
behind their sports. Contributors include Olympic gymnast Nastia 
Liukin; NASCAR driver Juan Pablo Montoya; Women's National Basketball 
Association player Temeka Johnson; National Hockey League player Ryan 
O'Reilly and members of the National Football League's New Orleans 
Saints. Astronauts Melvin and Nicole Stott also are featured. 

Students learned the differences in a game played in the gravity 
environment of Earth and the same game played in a microgravity 
environment, such as the space station. They used the knowledge to 
design or redesign a game to illustrate and apply Newton's laws. 

"Response to the challenge was very encouraging, with more than 55 
submissions," said Katie Wallace, director of NASA's Stennis Space 
Center's Office of Education in Bay St. Louis, Miss., where the 
challenge and accompanying curriculum were developed. "Even more 
encouraging was seeing students excited about, and involved in, 
learning science. Hopefully, they will continue in these studies and 
consider STEM careers." 

For information about the Science and Sports curriculum and related 
resources, visit: 



http://education.ssc.nasa.gov/spacedoutsports 


For information about NASA education programs, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/education 


For information about Stennis, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/stennis   

	
-end-



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