NASA Student Mars Project Wins Education Award

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Feb. 21, 2013

Dwayne Brown 
Headquarters, Washington                               
202-358-1726 
dwayne.c.brown@xxxxxxxx 

Guy Webster 
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. 
818-354-6278 
guy.webster@xxxxxxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 13-061

NASA STUDENT MARS PROJECT WINS EDUCATION AWARD

WASHINGTON -- A NASA project that allows students to use a camera on a 
spacecraft orbiting Mars for research has received a new education 
prize from the journal Science. 

NASA's Mars Student Imaging Project (MSIP), a component of NASA's 
Science Mission Directorate education and outreach activities, 
enables students from fifth grade through college to take an image of 
the Red Planet's surface with a camera aboard NASA's Mars Odyssey. 
Students study the image to answer their research questions. After 
the image comes back to Earth, the students are some of the first to 
see the picture and make their own discoveries. 

Established in 2012, the journal's Science Prize for Inquiry-Based 
Instruction encourages innovation and excellence in education by 
recognizing outstanding, inquiry-based science and design-based 
engineering education modules. A panel of scientists and teachers 
selected MSIP as one of 12 education projects from fields such as 
biology, chemistry, physics and Earth sciences. 

Designed to fit within existing science curricula, MSIP targets 
required science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) 
objectives and standards for easy integration into classrooms. 
Authentic research is at the core of the award-winning project. 

"At a time when the U.S. critically needs to develop the next 
generation of scientists and engineers, such student-led discoveries 
speak to the power of engaging students in authentic research in 
their classrooms today," said Jim Green, director of the Planetary 
Science Division of NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. 
"Not only is the chance to explore Mars motivating, it shows students 
they are fully capable of entering challenging and exciting STEM 
fields." 

Since MSIP began in 2002, more than 35,000 students across America 
have participated from public, private, urban, suburban and rural 
schools of all sizes, grade levels and student abilities. In 2010, a 
seventh-grade MSIP class in rural California discovered a previously 
unknown cave on Mars. A student presented their results at a major 
planetary science conference. 

"The Mars Student Imaging Project is a perfect example of how NASA can 
use its missions and programs to inspire the next generation of 
explorers," said Leland Melvin, NASA associate administrator for 
education in Washington. "If we want our students to become 
tomorrow's scientists and engineers, we need to give them 
opportunities to do real-world -- or in this case, out-of-this-world 
-- scientific research, using all of the tools of 21st century 
learning." 

MISP is a key component of NASA's Mars Public Engagement Program. The 
Mars Education Program at Arizona State University in Tempe, under 
the direction of Sheri Klug Boonstra, leads MSIP. Philip Christensen, 
principal investigator for the Thermal Emission Imaging System 
(THEMIS) visible and infrared camera aboard Odyssey, is MSIP's 
mentor. 

Orbiting Mars since 2001, Odyssey has operated longer than any 
spacecraft ever sent to Mars. The mission's longevity enables 
continued science from instruments on the orbiter, including the 
monitoring of seasonal changes on Mars from year to year. Odyssey 
also functions as a communication-relay service for NASA's Mars 
rovers. 

NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, Calif., manages 
the Mars Public Engagement Program and the Odyssey mission for the 
Science Mission Directorate in Washington. Lockheed Martin Space 
Systems in Denver built the orbiter. JPL and Lockheed Martin 
collaborate on operating the spacecraft. 

Information about the Mars Student Imaging Project is available at: 

http://mars.nasa.gov/msip 

For more about the Mars Odyssey mission, visit: 

http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/odyssey 

For information on the prize and eligibility criteria, visit: 

http://www.sciencemag.org/site/feature/data/prizes/inquiry/ 

	
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