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Sat, Jan 27, 2018

ISS Astronauts Will Conduct Lessons Developed By Christa McAuliffe

Teacher In Space Fatally Injured In 1986 Challenger Accident

Challenger Center announced that several of the lessons Christa McAuliffe planned to perform aboard the Challenger shuttle during the Teacher in Space mission will be completed aboard the International Space Station (ISS) this year. Challenger Center, in collaboration with NASA and STEM on Station, will work with astronauts Joe Acaba, currently aboard the ISS, and Ricky Arnold, scheduled to arrive in March, to film the lessons.

“We are thrilled to work with NASA’s educator astronauts to bring Christa’s lessons to life,” said Lance Bush, president and CEO, Challenger Center. “For more than 30 years, we have continued the mission of the Challenger crew, reaching more than 5 million students with our hands-on STEM programs. We are honored to have the opportunity to complete Christa’s lessons and share them with students and teachers around the world.”

Acaba and Arnold are both former educators and will film the activities over the next several months.

The lesson topics will include effervescence, chromatography, liquids in zero-g, and Newton’s law. Several of the lessons will be completed as originally planned by Christa and a few will be reimagined based on materials available aboard the ISS. The videos will be released alongside corresponding classroom lessons and available on Challenger Center’s website this spring.

“Filming Christa McAuliffe’s lessons in orbit this year is an incredible way to honor and remember her and the Challenger crew,” said Mike Kincaid, Associate Administrator for NASA’s Office of Education. “Developed with such care and expertise by Christa, the value these lessons will have as new tools available for educators to engage and inspire students in STEM is what will continue to advance a true legacy of Challenger’s mission.”

Christa McAuliffe was a high school teacher who made history when she became the first teacher selected to go into space. She had planned to film several demonstrations to be used as a part of educational packages distributed to students and teachers across the globe. The crew of the Challenger shuttle died tragically on the morning of Jan. 28, 1986 when the shuttle broke apart just 73 seconds after launch.

The announcement comes prior to the 32nd anniversary of the Challenger accident and was made by Acaba during a downlink hosted by Challenger Center and the McAuliffe Center at Framingham State University (FSU). FSU is Christa McAuliffe’s alma mater and home to one of Challenger Center’s 43 Challenger Learning Centers.  Both the Christa McAuliffe lesson collaboration and downlink at FSU are part of NASA’s Year of Education on Station initiative.

(Image provided with Challenger Center news release)

FMI: www.challenger.org

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