Teacher in Space Project
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The Teacher in Space Project (TISP) was a NASA program designed to educate students and spur excitement in math, science, and space exploration. Christa McAuliffe was selected to be the first teacher in space in 1984 with Barbara Morgan as her alternate. However, McAuliffe died in the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster (STS-51-L), which was supposed to make her the first teacher in space, and the first civilian (non-astronaut) in space. NASA halted the project amid concerns surrounding the risk of sending civilians to space.
In the 1990s, NASA decided to reopen its selection process, but with a more rigorous approach dubbed the Educator Astronaut Program. Instead of five months of training, these would be full-time professional astronauts with an education specialty.
Morgan was selected as NASA's first Educator Mission Specialist in January 1998, about 12 years after McAuliffe's death. She is assigned to the crew of STS-118, which is scheduled to launch in June 2007. Morgan will teach some of the same live lessons that McAuliffe was supposed to teach more than 20 years before, but as part of a wider curriculum. She will also integrate her duties as a fully trained astronaut with her education activities, which will include communicating with teachers and students on earth.[citation needed]
Other Educator Mission Specialists, added in the 2004 class, include[1]:
[edit] See also
- Network of Educator Astronaut Teachers
[edit] Notes
- ^ NASA's New Astronauts Meet The Press Oct. 8, 2004
[edit] External links
- EdSpace NASA's Educator Astronaut Program Web Site
- STS-118 mission summary
- Civilians in Space
- 'Teachers in Space' will endure
- NASA Assures That Teachers Will Fly in Space