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Grade-school teacher to go to space station


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Educating through ISS assembly
Unlike McAuliffe's planned flight aboard Challenger, which was completely dedicated to education projects and highlighted by two lessons to be broadcast on television, Morgan's mission is split between her duties as educator and mission specialist.

All told, under six hours will be reserved solely for education during STS-118, said Cindy McArthur, head of NASA's Teaching in Space project at JSC. While splitting Morgan's attention takes time away from education efforts, it also adds to her complete astronaut experience, which should help her better relate the mission to students and teachers on Earth, McArthur added.

Morgan will participate in at least one interactive video broadcast with students on Earth during the mission and record a series of video "teachable moments" while in orbit, McArthur said. If the mission is extended to 14 days, two additional video broadcasts are planned, she added.

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Morgan and her crewmates will also transfer a set of plant growth chambers, as well as basil and lettuce seeds, to the ISS for Expedition 15 astronaut Clayton Anderson to cultivate over 20 days as part of a NASA Engineering Design Challenge. She is flying some 10 million basil seeds that will later be distributed to students across the U.S. to grow in their own home-built growth chambers.

"But the on-orbit activities are only one component in a comprehensive education plan," McArthur said.

NASA will parlay Morgan's flight to support an Engineering Design Challenge during the 2007-2008 school year in an effort to challenge students to build their own plant growth chambers for lunar missions. The space agency is also planning a Fit Explorer program to emphasize the importance of physical fitness for students and astronauts in space.

A national pennant design challenge called on students to design their own banner for the STS-118 mission, with online voters choosing the top entry to fly aboard Endeavour during next month's mission.

Student Tapasya Das, of Mount Laurel, New Jersey, won the contest with her entry "Education 4 Exploration."

Other educators await flight
While Morgan is NASA's first to launch under the title educator astronaut, she is not the only professional teacher to join the agency's spaceflyer ranks.

Educator astronauts Dottie Metcalf-Lindenburger, Richard Arnold and Joseph Acaba, all trained schoolteachers selected in 2004, have completed their astronaut training and are currently awaiting their own spaceflight assignments.

"They're all of course completely trained and ready for a spaceflight whenever their assigned," McArthur said. "Our hope is certainly that, before the end of the shuttle flights and certainly then on the next generation of vehicles, that we'll continue to have educator astronauts fly."

© 2007 Space.com. All rights reserved. More from Space.com.


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