NASA Selects Teachers to Fly Student Experiments in Reduced Gravity Aircraft

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Sept. 20, 2012

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

Jeannette Owens 
Glenn Research Center, Cleveland 
216-433-2990 
jeannette.p.owens@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 12-328

NASA SELECTS TEACHERS TO FLY STUDENT EXPERIMENTS IN REDUCED GRAVITY AIRCRAFT

WASHINGTON -- Teachers from six NASA Explorer Schools (NES) have been 
selected to receive the 2012 School Recognition Award for their 
contributions to science, technology, engineering and mathematics 
(STEM) education. 

The teachers selected are from Woodrow Wilson Middle School, Glendale, 
Calif.; Franke Park Elementary School, Fort Wayne, Ind.; Mountview 
Road School, Morris Plains, N.J.; Corpus Christi Catholic School, 
Chambersburg, Pa.; Fairport High School, Fairport N.Y.; and Forest 
Lake Elementary Technology Magnet School, Columbia, S.C. 

In April 2013, three teachers from each school will travel to NASA's 
Johnson Space Center in Houston. There they will have the opportunity 
to fly aboard the agency's reduced gravity aircraft and conduct 
experiments designed by their students. The experiments will examine 
the acceleration and inertia of objects, how fluids with different 
viscosities behave in microgravity, and how the absence of gravity 
affects mass and weight. 

"Congratulations to the NES teachers selected for this innovative NASA 
experience. The reduced gravity flights allow teachers to conduct 
scientific investigations in a microgravity environment, similar to 
how experiments are conducted on the International Space Station," 
said Cecelia Fletcher, acting program manager for primary and 
secondary education at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "This 
experiential learning opportunity helps to spread the excitement of 
STEM education with teachers and students throughout the NASA 
Explorer School network." 

A team of NASA personnel reviewed many applications before selecting 
these six schools for their exemplary classroom practices and 
innovative uses of NES resources to engage a broad school population. 
These schools were chosen from more than 470 schools that are 
registered participants in the NASA Explorer Schools project. 

The NASA Explorer Schools project is the classroom-based gateway for 
students in grades 4-12 that focuses on stimulating STEM education 
using agency content and themes. 

For more information about the Explorer Schools Project, visit: 

http://explorerschools.nasa.gov 

To watch a four-minute video that provides project information and 
shows previous winners aboard the reduced gravity aircraft, visit: 

http://go.nasa.gov/pjy29I 

For more information about NASA's education programs, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/education 

	
-end-



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