Archive | February, 2014

THE SOLUTION to the Mission 6 Student Challenge: Understanding Weightlessness – You Want Me to Take a Bathroom Scale Where?

To teachers starting Mission 6 to ISS this week, this challenge was posted on Tuesday, February 25, 2014. It is designed to help you get the 8,000 students immersed in Mission 6 microgravity experiment design to start thinking about the concept of microgravity (often referred to as the phenomenon of ‘weighlessness’). As promised, here is […]

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For Mission 6 Student Researchers – A Challenge: Understanding Weightlessness – You Want Me to Take a Bathroom Scale Where?

To teachers starting Mission 6 to ISS this week, you are invited to use this challenge to get the 8,000 students immersed in Mission 6 microgravity experiment design to start thinking about the concept of microgravity (often referred to as the phenomenon of ‘weighlessness’). The solution to the Challenge will be posted Friday, February 28, […]

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What Do You Do When Over 7,300 Students Start Mission 6 to ISS on February 24, 2014? You Go With Tradition – NASA Johnson Style

It’s now a space program tradition. Whenever we start a new SSEP flight opportunity, it’s time for NASA Johnson Style. To all Community Program Directors in the at least 17 SSEP Mission 6 communities (and possibly more by this Monday), use this to get your students ready to roll. Put it up on the big […]

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The SSEP Mission 4 Orion Experiments: Honoring 11 More Student Flight Teams with Experiments Currently on the International Space Station

There are two payloads of student flight experiments currently being conducted aboard the International Space Station (ISS) by astronaut Koichi Wakata (Japan) – the Falcon II payload of 12 SSEP Mission 3b experiments and the Orion payload of 11 SSEP Mission 4 experiments. With this post on the SSEP National Blog, we are honoring the 11 student flight teams for the Mission […]

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Honoring the 12 Student Teams With SSEP Mission 3b Experiments Currently Being Conducted on the International Space Station

We are now 15 days before the next Crew Interaction Day (the 4th of 6) with the SSEP experiments on the International Space Station (ISS), on February 26, 2014. We are just 29 days from de-orbit and return to Earth for the 12 SSEP Mission 3b Falcon II experiments and the 11 SSEP Mission 4 Orion experiments aboard Soyuz […]

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International Space Station Office, NASA Johnson Space Center, on SSEP: 21st Century Science Education Thrives Aboard ISS

This month, NASA Johnson Space Center published a powerful story showcasing research conducted by SSEP student researchers on the International Space Station. The story was written by Mark Wolverton for the International Space Station Office, and appears on the ISS Research page. The story covers research results reported by student research teams at the SSEP Annual Conference, […]

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Flight Operations Update: SSEP Mission 3b and 4 Experiments on ISS

This is an update of on-orbit flight operations for the Student Spaceflight Experiments Program (SSEP) Mission 3b Falcon II and Mission 4 Orion experiments currently on the International Space Station. Crew Interaction Day 3 (of 6) occurred on schedule on Thursday, January 30, 2014. Crew interactions by astronaut Koichi Wakata were completed at 10:10 am ET. […]

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The Student Spaceflight Experiments Program (SSEP) is a program of the National Center for Earth and Space Science Education (NCESSE) in the U.S., and the Arthur C. Clarke Institute for Space Education internationally. It is enabled through a strategic partnership with DreamUp PBC and NanoRacks LLC, which are working with NASA under a Space Act Agreement as part of the utilization of the International Space Station as a National Laboratory. SSEP is the first pre-college STEM education program that is both a U.S. national initiative and implemented as an on-orbit commercial space venture.