Contact Victor Williamson with your questions about simulator based experiential education programs for your school.
SpaceCampUtah@gmail.com

Saturday, November 17, 2012

A New Addition to the Space Center's Picnic Area and Answers to Your Questions

New Additions to the Space Center's Picnic Area

James Merrell has volunteered at the Space Center for nearly 3 years.  He called me some time ago asking if there was something he could do at the Space Center for an Eagle Scout Project.

Two years ago I served on Clark Planetarium's Board of Advisers.  Seth Jarvis,  the Director of Clark Planetarium, gave me a granite plaque honoring the Challenger astronauts.  The planetarium didn't have a suitable place to display the plaque properly and thought of the Space Center. The Space Center was named after Christa McAuliffe, America's teacher in space who died aboard the Challenger when it exploded over the Atlantic in 1986. 

I told James I'd like the plaque mounted for everyone to see in our picnic area.  We also needed a permenant trash can.  Both projects would meet his Eagle Project requirement.

James finished the project two weeks ago.  Helping James with the project were;
Barry Merrell, Annette Merrell, Robbie Merrell, James Merrell, Dennis Spackman, Mike Roundy, Tyler Roundy, Austin Roundy, Dustin Roundy, Shad Roundy, Darin Harris, Duff Gardner, Jay Fletcher, Ken Fackrell, Emma Lynn, Jordan Reitz, Tanyon Jorgensen, Nikki Bailey, Jonas Mooney,  West Lewis and Miguel Nolasco.
I'd like to thank James and his team for a job well done.  The plaque and the permanent trash can complete our picnic area on the school's northeast corner.
It is a fitting tribute to the astronauts who died on the Challenger.  Their sacrifice and dedication to the exploration of space will be memorialized at our Space Center.




The Space Center's Picnic Area before the addition of the plaque and trash can


A few of the many who helped James.

 The Granite Plaque



The face of the plaque


The permanent trash can


James Merrell our newest Eagle Scout

 

A Great Article on the Use of Simulations in Education

http://www.creativeteachingsite.com/edusims.html


Answers to Your Questions

Caitlynn asked:
Do you know if we will still have the guilds? Or really if there is anything large that will change about the space center in regard to that line of thought?
Thank you for the question.  I don't know what will happen to the Space Center's Guilds.  The Space Center is under district office management.  They have directed me to close our organizations, clubs and programs pending recommendations from the fifteen member Space Center Committee.  The committee will make its recommendation to the Alpine District School Board.   
The committee is concerned because many of our dedicated and highly trained volunteers and staff have found employment elsewhere.  Others are preparing for LDS missions, while others have joined other school clubs and organizations.   
I strongly believe the Space Center should retain the Guilds.  I will do everything I can to ensure our guilds, clubs, classes and camps remain a part of the Space Center experience.  
Adam asked
I was just reading the blog and have a few questions.
Is the voyager, Magellan, and Galileo going to stay at central, or will we rebuild them in a new place.
Also, have the committee found out where the new space center will be?
Thanks for all you do.
-Adam P.
Thank you for your question Adam.  We have been assured the new center will have simulators.  We hope they will continue to be futuristic starship simulators.  I will encourage the committee to keep the names of our former simulators. 
The Space Center Committee will consider what to do with the simulators at Central School, then make a recommendation to the school board.  The simulators may stay at Central or be removed.  

Anonymous asked
I love the missions on the odyssey and voyager is there any way that those missions could be converted to the other ships? 
Thank you for the question.  The missions told in the permanently closed Odyssey and Voyager will hopefully be told in the other ships.  We can't begin the rewriting and mission prep work to get them converted to the other ships because our programming guild is closed.  I don't have permission to use Space Center funds to pay our staff and programmers to work on the story revisions for the remaining ships at the present time.     

Anonymous asked
I finished all of the requirements to become a volunteer right before the Center closed. All I had left was the final phone call... Will I be able to start up as soon as they Center reopens, or will I have to go through the process again. (BTW my observation form is framed in my room. just waiting...)
Thank you for the question.  You will not have to redo your mission observations when and if we get any of our simulators reopened at Central School.  Volunteers will be needed if the ships open.  Thank you for volunteering.  



Thursday, November 15, 2012

News, Answers to your Emails, Letter to the Editor and the Imaginarium

Hello Troops,
I was told the Facebook group "Save the Space Center" made a short presentation to the school board and district officials Tuesday evening at the monthly board meeting.   Casey Voeks, chairman of the organization, reported our fans were well behaved and respectful.   I'm happy to hear that.  I was also told about one small blemish in the presentation.  Apparently Casey Voeks got a bit long winded and exceeded his allocated minutes.  We all know Casey suffers from a condition called dilectionem vox (love of one's own voice).  This malady runs rampant through current and former Space Center Flight Directors.  It was further reported that he ignored one time warning and continued with his remarks. A muzzle may be needed for future events :)  

The Space Center has always been a school, community and business partnership.  We wouldn't be here today had we not had our school district's support.  We wouldn't be here today had we not had community support.  The Space Center's guests provide most of the Space Center's yearly operating budget through camp and class tuitions and private party bookings.   We wouldn't be here today had we not had support from the business community in the form of grants and donations.   Partnerships like these make strong schools; strong schools produce a well educated citizenry.


I want to thank everyone for their continued support of the Christa McAuliffe Space Education Center.
Sharon Christa McAuliffe, was the first teacher to fly in space. Selected from among more than 11,000 applicants from the education profession for entrance into the astronaut ranks, McAuliffe had been born on September 2, 1948, the oldest child of Edward and Grace Corrigan. Her father was at that time completing his sophomore year at Boston College, but not long thereafter he took a job as an assistant comptroller in a Boston department store and the family moved to the Boston suburb of Framingham. As a youth she registered excitement over the Apollo moon landing program, and wrote years later on her astronaut application form that “I watched the Space Age being born and I would like to participate.”

McAuliffe attended Framingham State College in her hometown, graduating in 1970. A few weeks later she married her longstanding boyfriend, Steven McAuliffe, and they moved to the Washington, DC, metropolitan area so Steven could attend Georgetown Law School. She took a job teaching in the secondary schools, specializing in American history and social studies. They stayed in the Washington area for the next eight years, she teaching and completing an M.A. from Bowie State University, in Maryland. They moved to Concord, New Hampshire, in 1978 when Steven accepted a job as an assistant to the state attorney general. Christa took a teaching post at Concord High School in 1982, and in 1984 learned about NASA's efforts to locate an educator to fly on the Shuttle. The intent was to find a gifted teacher who could communicate with students from space.

NASA selected McAuliffe for this position in the summer of 1984 and in the fall she took a year-long leave of absence from teaching, during which time NASA would pay her salary, and trained for an early 1986 Shuttle mission. She had an immediate rapport with the media, and the teacher in space program received tremendous popular attention as a result. It is in part because of the excitement over McAuliffe's presence on the Challenger that the accident had such a significant impact on the nation.   
http://www.framingham.com
A Letter from a Teacher
Dear Mr. Williamson,
My name is Melanie Smith Skankey, I was a long time camper at the space center and short time volunteer. It has been many years since I have been in the alpine area for I now live in Cedar City working as a teacher. I was however recently informed about the centers current closure. 

I am sure you hear this often but I hope the following message can aid your cause in trying to reopen your door. 

The space center altered my life for the better, it was directly related to my decision to attend college, and pursue eventually a education degree. When I construct lessons for my students I often think about how the space center used a variety of "alternative teaching methods" to instruct me in the areas of leadership, science and critical thinking. Last year I constructed a mini space center experience for my students. While there was no computers, no special transporters or even a voice changer I still have student remember that one day. The teacher I did it with has begged me to repeat the experience because of how it not only united the students but forced them to really think (not something they often experience at school sadly).

My overall point is as a previous camper and now an educator I know that the lesson taught at the space center have a profound and lasting effect on the students who experience it . I will forever be grateful for the experiences I had there. 

If there is any other support I can offer please let me know.
Melanie Skankey
A Letter to the Editor of the Daily Herald
November 14, 2012

I spent my fifth and sixth grade years at Pleasant Grove's Central Elementary in the Christa McAuliffe Space Education Center.
It was one of the most influential periods in my life. My time there shaped the way I look at the world, and developed the skills that I use every day.
It wasn't just the fun of the place, it was the sense of belonging there. Regardless of how weird, or nerdy, or strange I was, there was a place where I was accepted. I don't think that I could have made it through secondary school without the skills I learned there. Skills like thinking on your feet and teamwork that are vital to future life, but are not always emphasized in a traditional classroom setting.
Without the experiences I had there, I would be a completely different person today. I can't adequately express the gratitude I feel for Mr. Williamson and all the staff at the Space Center for the profound impact they made on my life. It would be a travesty to take the experience away from others. I implore the school district and the community to get behind this program to ensure that it will continue.
Matt Bezzant, Pleasant Grove

Answers to Your Questions

Answers to the questions submitted through the comments section of each blog post and from emails.

Kolby asked:
I am also wondering, when the space center opens what it will take to volunteer there. Oh, and why build another building if the Magellan, Galileo, and Phoenix will be reopening next year? 
Kolby,  Please visit our web site's Volunteering page to read the requirements to volunteer. 
The Magellan, Galileo and Phoenix are good for after school and Saturday private missions.  The three ships can't handle large field trips.  The Space Center needs a new building so we can start taking field trips again.


SillyStaff asked:
 Mr. W.
whats going to happen to the space center? I know that you said that you dont know and that its the Alpine School District that decides... But do you at least know what they want to do, our what will most likly happen! I find myself thinking more and more about the space center, I even stood outside today with a sign that said: "To close the Space Center would be: "Illogical."
What can we do to help? Can we all meet infront of the school waving big signs saying save the space center? That way all the staff could see eachother again!
 SillyStaff, our committee will meet again on November 28.  We will be working through the details for a new Space Center building.  We also want to reopen the ships which require the least amount of repair.  Keep your grades up and be ready when the call goes out for volunteers to come back to work.  It will be soon.
Thank you for your dedication and willingness to be a Space Center volunteer.  Keep reading the blog for other ways to help and for news on the Space Center's Open House.

Jordan asked:
Mr.W Thanks so much for everything you have done! With the meeting today are we going to start getting information? Are we planing on staying at the old center or do we get a new building....? A lot of people are being kept in that dark so I was wondering if you could help me out on that one! Thanks
Jordan, we want to reopen the ships that require the least amount of repair.  A new Space Center building will be built, the details of which still must be worked out in the committee.  The school board will make the final decision.

Nathan asked:
If the Space Center will be allowed to re-open the Phoenix, Galileo and Magellan (Possibly), will the Magellan still be renamed as the U.S.S. Magellan instead of D.S.S.? I recall hearing discussions of that idea being explored.
The Magellan has been converted into a Starship.


Anonymous asked:
Wait, are you saying that they might not tear down the ships? And how long do you think the repairs will take for the ships?
The Odyssey must be removed.  It will cost too much to repair.  I don't know what we will do with the Voyager.  It is also too costly to be brought up to current codes.
The Magellan, Phoenix and Galileo should be repairable and opened soon.


The Imaginarium


Space Center Fans laugh at your weak gingerbread house.



A creative way to say "Shoplifters will be prosecuted".



Imagination: A
A perfect way to deal with the kid who can't be trusted in
a grocery store :)


I think the only Christmas Tree bulbs allowed for our school Christmas Trees :)


What teachers do and say in their faculty lounges.


Somebody is waiting for you to get off the computer and accept his friend request.


I keep mine in the truck of my Battlestar


The evolution of music delivery devices.


Privacy bubble.
Imagination: A


I usually never drop money in a tip jar, 
but I'd drop something in this because its creative


Imagination: A
Bet most of you haven't a clue.


You've got to get your hands dirty if you want to change the world.




Star Trek engagement ring



Balloon lights.
Creativity: A


Brillance in engineering.
Take the mundane footbridge and make it extraordinary.
Imagineering at work.


Sunday, November 11, 2012

Posts from the Space Center's First Blog, Spaceedventures.

Do you know how blessed you are?
Appreciate your educational opportunities.


 Hello Troops,
The Troubadour starts the week with a few posts from the Center's previous blog "Spaceedventures".  Spaceedventures started in March 2000 and was discontinued when The Troubadour took its place.

Spaceedventures stores hundreds of old posts and articles, many of which are interesting to read and archive from a Space Center historical viewpoint.  I'm slowing working my way through the old blog's posts and moving them to The Troubadour for save keeping until a more permanent history of the Space Center is written some time in the future.

Mr. Williamson 

 June 2, 2000

Hello Voyagers!
I recently received this email. I thought you may like to read it.  Its good to know that what we do makes a difference.  Sit back, read, and pat yourselves on the back.


Mr. W.

And now Ashley's letter:

Ashley Wright sent the following...

I recently atended your over-night camp on the 19 & 20th of this month. It was the best thing I have ever done. I was admiral of the Magellan space station. Being an admiral was not an easy job.  But it taught me a lot of responsibilities. 

I talked face to face with an alien that I had to have a translator in order to talk to
him. We made a date with Captain Jose & our communications officer in trade for some coolent. Another time we even traded 2 pairs of Nike shoes for coolent. 


I would suggest this camp to all of my friends.  I would like to bring a cousin of mine to your 3 day summer camp. I have found out that your summer camps this year are already full.  If you could, please send all the information you have on your summer camps. I am going to work really hard this summer in order to have some money to attend next years summer camp. Please include the price for those 3 day camps. 
I hope to hear from your camp very soon. Again I would like to say, I think it is the most wonderfull & the most exciting thing I have ever done. I will recomend this program to all of my friends!

December 27, 2000


Bill Neville was a blue shirt supervisor in the late 1990's.  He graduated and left the Space Center for college. 

December 27, 2000

Vic -

Well, after a delinquent absence, I figured that it's probably about time to give you an update on my life.

I ended up graduating from Rowland Hall a year early and enrolled at
Davidson College in North Carolina. It's a fantastic liberal arts college, though I seem more and more to be operating under the assumption that it is a conservatory theatre program. While this isn't true (our department has three profs and only four majors a year), the faculty is outstanding and the level of passion that everyone brings to classes, productions, and extracarriculars is truly mind blowing.
 
It's hard to imagine that I'm already halfway through my sophomore year - 2.5 years until the real world, right? Or at least Grad school... But it has been a blast and a blur. Living 24 hours a day with some of the most intellectually challenging, intelligent, dedicated people I've ever met has proven to be more fun than I could have imagined. I've found myself drowning (and loving it) in Shakespearean lit theory and in all aspects of theatre, and it looks like I'm heading for a career directing professionally. I'm also loving set and lighting design more and more, but I've found a passion for directing that I could not previously have imagined.

It's been a great, wild few years, and I credit my time working with you at the Space Center with helping me find my own drive and vision, and especially with overcoming my fear of leadership. I ran into a friend from high school who mentioned that a RHSM crowd was coming down
sometime over break. The craziness never really seems to end, does it?

I hope that all is well with you, and that you're taking some occasional time off from your overwhelming dedication to the kids you encounter each day.

If you get the chance to drop me a note, I'd love to get caught up on
everything happening your way. Merry Christmas, and I hope I can make it down sometime soon to see how everything is going in gand ol'
Pleasant Grove...

All That Jazz,
Bill Neville


And something from a news update posted at the end of the year.

December 28, 2000

Hello Troops!
I want to take a minute to update you on Christmas developments at the
Center.

1. The Magellan is getting a much needed face lift.

2. The Galileo is up on blocks! Yesterday Kyle Herring and Principal Adams hoisted the Galileo up and placed it on blocks so the wheel base
could be replaced and the wheels repaired.
3. The Galileo is getting new computer programs. Brian Hawkins, our
hypercard programmer and a member of our education staff (Programming Classes) is getting the Galileo ready for the
Oceanography Super Saturdays coming up in January.
4. The Odyssey is getting its submarine programs updated also getting
ready for the Oceanography Super Saturdays.
5. Mr. Daymont is preparing the Falcon for its switchover to become a
simulator. It's new stories will match the rest of our ship's for fun and excitiment - full EdVentures on the Falcon are coming!
6. Soren Seibach, our assistant Hypercard Programmer, is working
to finish the Magellan's new computer controls. Due date is Jan.
2nd.
7. Final touches are being put on the Discovery by Kyle Herring and
Dan Adams. As many of you know, the Discovery is the Magellan's
Briefing room and science center for Central Elementary.
8. The Voyager is having its computers cleaned and black plastic
cleaned.
9. The Odyssey is going to get a new entrance. The Center recently
received a donation of a new revolving door just like the one on the stage to enter the Voyager. The new door will be placed on the outside of the Odyssey to assist with the "transition" from the real world to the world of make believe.

As you can see, the Space Center never sleeps. A special thanks to all

our staff for the extreme dedication it takes to keep our sets up and
running. I am amazed at the level of volunteerism and dedication our
flight directors and volunteers display. Thanks to all for being a
part of our team and making the Center one of the world's most unique
learning Centers.

Mr. Williamson