The Staff in the Discovery Room enthralled and captivated by the words of their fearless leader Casey, Brittney, Stacy, Rachel, Christine, Erin, and Taylor |
Life at the Christa McAuliffe Space Education Center in the Voyager Era (1990-2012)
Hello Troops,
The Troubadour is pleased to bring you another of its weekly "Life During the Voyager Era at the Christa McAuliffe Space Education Center". Today I have six newly discovered photographs from that time.
Stacy Carrell was the Galileo's Set Director. Here she is in the Odyssey's Control Room. Was she flying the Odyssey or just visiting one of her many co-workers and friends? I've been told repeatedly by many flight directors both past and present that Stacy was one of the best flight director trainers the Space Center ever had.
The old Odyssey was a temperamental ship, no doubt about it. You never knew what it would throw at you when you woke it from its slumber for a field trip or private mission. The blue styrofoam behind Stacy covers a sealed door between the Odyssey's Control Room and the school's library. The styrofoam was to dampen the noise between ship and library. It didn't work very well, leading to constant tension between Mrs. Schiller and the Odyssey's staff.
The girls hard at work beautifying themselves. Stacy, Erin, Rachel, and Caity. |
Stacy and Emily Accusing Each Other of Leaving the Set Up Landing Party on the Stage a Shambles |
Aleta Clegg, the best camp cook, planetarium director, teacher, merit badge instructor, and office manager a Space Center Director could wish for. |
Brent Anderson and ? sitting in front of my desk in the Briefing Room. Brent was the Programming Guild Director |
Brent Anderson (above) was my Programming Guild Director and the Space Center's IT guru for a few years before his mission. He kept our ships operational. He was the man we called when the ships refused to obey a flight director's commands. He was the one of the Space Center's first "ship whisperers". He had the temperament, personality, and skill to coerce, cajole, and tease a simulator back into action.
Mr. Williamson
Telos Discovery Space Center and InfiniD Fly Thousands of Students at the STEM Festival.
The line to enter the Valiant and Titan at the STEMfest in Sandy last week. Casey Voeks is seen next to the Titan |
Dozens of local exhibitors set up interactive booths with hands-on activities for kids, from a vortex cannon that shoots concentrated air at delighted onlookers to InfiniD's Titan Starship Simulator and Telos Discovery Space Center's Valiant Simulator. Other booths included biotechnology secrets, Lego robots, and drones equipped with thermal cameras.
InfiniD's Titan Simulator |
One of the Crews on their 3 minute live or die Mission |
InfinD's Casey Voeks sent me a text summarizing the InfiniD and Telos team's exhausting Tuesday schedule. "We flew about 125 three minute flights today with our partners at TDSC. The Titan and the Valiant flew. It was rad. About 10% of the crews beat the scenario. Who needs Disneyland when you have InfiniD Learning?!? 2 hour waits today to fly a three-minute problem-solving scenario at Utah’s STEM Fest. 1500+ simulated deaths. We love our partners at USSynthetic and we love flying around with #kidsinspace. There you have it, just wanted to pass along the good news."
Telos Discovery Space Center's Valiant Simulator at the STEM Fest. |
The two simulators were a real crowd pleaser |
We were going up as a sixth grade until our bus reservation fell through. We licked our wounds and consoled ourselves with the fact that we had the USS Voyager right there at our school. All 750+ Renaissance students will have the opportunity to fly several InfiniD missions this year in the Voyager. Then there are our 25 Young Astronaut and Voyager Club squadrons (258 students) who will fly an additional eight times this year in the club's long duration after school mission program. No other school in the broad international network of starship simulators offers its students as many opportunities to fly in a Voyager inspired simulator than Renaissance Academy.
Thank you Renaissance Academy administration and Board and thank you InfiniD for these great opportunities. I also want to thank Farpoint's hardworking and dedicated staff and volunteers: Isaac Ostler, Alex DeBirk, Maeson Busk, Spencer, Jensen, Chris and the Voyager Club volunteers and Space Tech class.
The partnership of Telos Discovery Space Center, InfiniD, Lions Gate Center, and Farpoint is bearing fruit with joint missions, training, curriculum, the WebDev Programming Group, and other areas yet to be explored. The Christa McAuliffe Space Education Center in Pleasant Grove is working with us by joining forces on grant applications to explore new ways to join forces to bring this 35-year old simulation educational experience to students worldwide. Wonderful things are happening. Get involved.
Mr. Williamson
Theater Imaginarium
The Best Gifs of the Week Edited for Gentler Audiences
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