Recent Press Releases
This page contains our most recent press releases. For older releases, please
see our
press release archive.
Teachers in Space Calls for More Educator Astronauts to Fly
Kennedy Space Center, FL, August 21, 2007
– As the Space Shuttle Endeavour touched down with Educator
Astronaut Barbara Morgan on board, Teachers in Space project leaders
called for NASA to announce flight dates for the three remaining
Educator Astronauts.
"NASA has taken the first step toward keeping the commitment it made
to education more than 20 years ago, but it's only the first step,"
said Teachers in Space project manager Edward Wright.
“We call on
NASA Administrator Mike Griffin to immediately announce flight dates
for the next three Educator Astronauts – Joe Acaba, Ricky Arnold and
Dottie Metcalf-Lindenburger.
”
Teachers in Space was a NASA project in the 1980's, but NASA
discontinued the effort after the Challenger accident that claimed
the life of teacher Christa McAuliffe in 1986. Teachers in Space has
been revived as a private nonprofit project by the Space Frontier
Foundation and the United States Rocket Academy. Instead of flying
teachers aboard the Shuttle, the new Teachers in Space program will
use suborbital passenger vehicles now under development by
commercial companies.
“The Educator Astronaut program is taking teachers out of the
classroom to join the NASA astronaut corps,
” Wright said.
“Our goal is to put astronaut teachers
into American classrooms.
”
Space Frontier Foundation chairman Bob Werb believes NASA still has a role
to play as well.
“We call on NASA to fly
the three remaining Educator Astronauts as soon as possible and to
give them more time to teach lessons from space. After flying, they
should return to the classroom, alongside the astronaut teachers we
will be creating.
”
Teachers in Space is preparing to begin the process of selecting the
first of many teachers who will fly in space on suborbital vehicles.
The start of the selection process will be officially announced at
the Wirefly X Prize Cup, a public spaceflight show at Holloman Air
Force Base, New Mexico on October 26-28.
Teachers in Space to Begin Accepting Applications
Alamogordo, NM, August 8, 2007
– As Educator Astronaut Barbara Morgan prepares to blast into space,
the Space Frontier Foundation and the United States Rocket Academy
announced that the new Teachers in Space effort will begin accepting
applications from teachers this October.
"We congratulate Barbara
Morgan on the beginning of this historic voyage," said Space
Frontier Foundation Executive Director Jeff Krukin. "NASA is keeping
a commitment to education that was made more than 20 years ago. Now,
we need to take the next step. The Educator Astronaut program takes
a teacher out of the classroom to join the NASA astronaut corps. Our
goal is to let many teachers experience spaceflight and return to
American classrooms to educate and inspire the next generation."
President Ronald Reagan announced the first Teacher in Space program
in 1984. NASA selected Christa McAuliffe and Barbara Morgan to be
the first teachers to fly in space, but NASA backed away from the
program after the Challenger accident claimed the life of Christa
McAuliffe in 1986. Under political pressure in the 1990s, NASA
created the Educator Astronaut program and accepted Barbara Morgan
as a permanent NASA employee. Unfortunately, the goal of returning
flown teachers to American classrooms was lost.
"We're returning to that original vision," said Teachers in Space
project manager Edward Wright, "and expanding on it. The average
teacher touches thousands of students during a teaching career.
Imagine the impact of hundreds or even thousands of astronaut
teachers, men and women who have been to space, in American schools.
For 40 years, we've held forth the false promise that if students
studied math and science, they would have a chance to go into space.
A student still has a better chance of playing professional
basketball than flying as a NASA astronaut. Today, we're changing
that. Private companies are developing a new generation of reusable
suborbital vehicles that promise dramatic reductions in the cost of
human spaceflight. We are working with leading suborbital companies.
When they're ready to fly, we will have teachers who are trained and
ready to go."
The rules for the first competition will be announced at the Wirefly
X-PRIZE Cup on October 26-28, and we will begin accepting
applications at that time.
For older releases, please
see our press release archive.