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

Sunday, March 17, 2013

The Time has Come to Move On.

Hello Troops,
Most of you know this, but I'd better make it official. My last day with the Alpine School District will be May 30th. I've decided to retire, jump the fence and see what's on the other side. It has been a wonderful 30 years working with the students and teachers at Central Elementary School; seven years teaching 6th grade and twenty-three years directing the Space Center and teaching the school's pre-algebra class. I spent much of my time directing the Space Center from my little corner in the Voyager's Control Room (picture), one of my favorite places on Earth. Over 320,000 students got to experience the Space Center's unique EdVentures thanks to the dedicated hard work of so many good people. What a Team!
The Space Center will continue to offer field trips under a new director.  I plan on continuing my work with simulation based, experiential education through our new Space EdVentures Foundation, the Farpoint Academy,  the Discovery Space Center and so on and so forth....  
Fellow Troubadours, I hope you'll come along with me.  The EdVenture has only begun.   
The universe is lovely, dark, and deep,
But we have promises to keep,
And light years to go before we sleep,
And light years to go before we sleep. 
  (thanks Robert Frost)
Mr. W. 
How I've Spent the Last 23 Years

Me, at the helm of the USS Voyager.

Me at the white board teaching my pre-algebra class.  

Friday, March 15, 2013

Alpine School District's Building Rental Committee Votes "No" to Foundation Proposal

The Alpine School District Building Rental Committee voted "No" to the Space EdVentures Foundation's proposal to use the Space Center's simulators to continue the Space Center's 22 year history of offering after school private parties, classes, camps and the Computer Programming Guild.  The Foundation's proposal also included restarting the popular Space Center volunteer program.  No reasons were given in the notification email.   

The Building Rental Committee classified the Foundation as a Class II rental. Under the District's Standard Rental Agreement, non-profit organizations, like the Space EdVentures Foundation, are considered Class II organizations.  Class II organizations are charged $60 per hour - per room used.  In addition to the room rental, the Foundation would be charged additional fees to use the space simulator's equipment (computers, projectors, sound systems etc).  The Foundation was hoping to get a discounted rate by creating a partnership with the District to restart the Space Center's popular discontinued programs and support the simulators at Central School.  

The Bad News
The Foundation cannot afford these terms, therefore, its work to restore the Space Center's volunteer program, public missions, camps, classes and programming club comes to an end.  The Space EdVentures Foundation's Board of Directors expressed disappointed with the committee's decision, but not surprise.  The Foundation will move ahead with its mission of bringing the Space Center experience to all the people in our communities who have a desire to participate in a one of a kind educational Space EdVenture. 

The Good News
The Space Center's volunteer program, classes and programming club will continue through the Foundation's Farpoint Academy at its new home, The Discovery Space Center in Pleasant Grove.  The Discovery Space Centers offers school field trips, private parties, day camps and overnight camps.  Contact them at Discoveryspacecenter.com to book your party and camp.   Farpoint Academy's web site will be online as soon as it finalizes its class schedule.  

This spring, in addition to its programs at the Discovery Space Center,  the Space EdVentures Foundation's Farpoint Academy, hopes to open a second learning site in Lehi for people who live in the northern part of Utah county.  Discussions with the sponsoring organization are under way and going well.  Watch the blog for further news as it becomes available.
   

Pleasant Grove's Discovery Space Center Opens for Field Trips

Two Lakeview Academy buses arriving at the Discovery Space Center for the Center's first field trip.

The Discovery Space Center (DSC) opened Thursday for field trips.  One hundred sixth graders from Lakeview Academy arrived at 9:40 A.M. to participate in Discovery's four hour program, consisting of a planetarium show, a space science class and a starship simulation in one of Discovery's four starship simulators.

"The kids cheered at the end of the program.  It was awesome!" said Center Director, Casey Voeks.  "I didn't know if we going to pull it off, but we did.  It was a madhouse around here Wednesday night as we tried to finish the ships and get everything ready.  Some of us were here all night."

Programming was the biggest problem facing the Discovery staff.  Casey explained their predicament. "Our simulator computer programs weren't finished, so we called Gary Gardiner in Pennsylvania and asked if we could use his simulator's programs as an emergency back up.  He said yes and sent a revised copy that worked on our older laptops."  Gary is the founder and director of Dream Flight Adventures, a Space EdVentures partner organization in Pennsylvania.

The Space EdVentures Foundation congratulations the Discovery Space Center.


The Programming Guild's, John Robe, Accepts the Sterling Scholar Award


John Robe, seen center in the photo above, is a member of the Space EdVenture Foundation's Programming Guild.  He stared as a Space Center volunteer before joining the Space Center's former Programming Guild.  We expect to hear great things from John over the upcoming years.

Congratulations John!


Space and Science News


This image may look like TV static, but it's actually a representation of the irrational number pi (perhaps the only thing we remember from middle-school geometry class). Pi starts off as 3.1415 but goes on literally forever, and this picture shows the first 4 million digits of "forever." Each digit from 0 to 9 has been assigned a different color, and each color pops up here as a square pixel, in order, line by line. Math geeks will be pleased to know that the team behind this image has alsocreated an interactive applet that lets you take a closer look at the number in 500,000-digit sections.


In what could go down as one of the great Eureka! moments in physics – and win somebody the Nobel Prize – scientists said Thursday that after a half-century quest, they are confident they have found a Higgs boson, the elusive subatomic speck sometimes called the "God particle."
The existence of the particle was theorized in 1964 by the British physicist Peter Higgs to explain why matter has mass. Scientists believe the particle acts like molasses or snow: When other tiny basic building blocks pass through it, they stick together, slow down and form atoms. Read On

 

Fatal Distraction: Teen Drivers And Passengers Are A Deadly Mix



Sometimes to get change, you need a tipping point. Maybe this week will be it: Since Sunday, 15 teenagers have died in major car accidents around the U.S. Six died after crashing into a pond in Ohio. Five died when they crashed into a tanker truck in Texas. Four died when they crashed into a creek in Illinois.


And that's just the crashes that were major and notable enough to make national news. One teen in Colorado died Sunday when the teen driver of a car he was in crashed into the side of a mobile homeRead On



PE lessons must be a breeze for these kids after their walk to school — across a cliff face.
For an hour, pupils as young as six edge along a crumbling 2ft-wide path cut into the rock up a mountain as an irrigation ditch.  There is a safer route but it takes twice as long.  Walking home too, the kids at Banpo school in Guizhou, China, have learned the high road tops the slow road.


The Imaginarium
If you Don't Use It, You'll Lose It!


A disturbing find for many a shopper.



Sometimes life can turn on a dime.
Never judge someone by his or her circumstances.







Poor Pluto


What's up with English?



The perfect, all around decoration





Congratulations to our Catholic readers on the election of a new Pope.


Thursday, March 14, 2013

Amazing Space Video. Space Center Winners. Space News. The Imaginarium


Your Thought for the Day


Hello Troops,
It is a busy morning here at The Troubadour's headquarters in beautiful Pleasant Grove, Utah.  Let's get down to business...

An Amazing Video.  A Must Watch

This is the most comprehensive and scientifically accurate, three-dimensional map of the known universe.  Take a short 2 minute, hyper-light, voyage to the star HR 8799.  I'll expect you to swoon with several outbursts of awe and wonder  several times during the journey. 




Mar 11, 2013
This visualization, produced using the Hayden Planetarium's Digital Universe--the most comprehensive and scientifically accurate, three-dimensional map of the known universe-- shows where the star HR 8799 is in relation to our solar system. Recently, a team of researchers led by the American Museum of Natural History used a suite of high-tech instrumentation and software called Project 1640 (www.amnh.org/project1640) to collect the first chemical fingerprints, or spectra, of the four red exoplanets orbiting this star. This visualization also shows other stars that are known to harbor planetary systems (stars with blue circles around them). HR 8799's system, which is 128 light years away from Earth, is one of only a couple of these stars that have been imaged, and the only one for which spectroscopy of all the planets has been obtained. Over the next three years, the team will survey many of these other stars in the same manner in which they studied HR 8799.


Two Members of our Space Center Community Bag the Big Ones!

John Robe is a 2013 Sterling Scholar!  John is a member of the Space Center's Programming Guild.
 
Justin Meiners won the Farnsworth Award.  Justin was a former member of our Space Center Programming Guild.

Congratulations!

John wrote this on his Facebook   page:
 I WON!! Wasatch Front Computer Technology Sterling Scholar. So unbelievable - I'm in complete shock. It was unbelievable that I could be associated with such an amazing group of talented people. I am truly blessed, and I am so grateful to all of the people that made this possible. I love you all! - Also congratulations to Justin Meiners on getting the Farnsworth award!!
I'm going to include one of the Facebook comments from Katie Kirkham Anderson which highlights the positive effect the Space Center has had on science education.
I'm going to focus on the positive and ignore the not. Yay Space Center!!! I really would like to come see the new location sometime. Hopefully its new incarnation will have as much or more success as the old in inspiring girls to go into science!  
Katie Kirkham Anderson
 OK, Time to Get Blown Away by this Amazing Invention
 
  "Using new communication technologies, 'MYO', the wearable gesture controlled arm-band by Thalmic Labs is capable of measuring electrical activity in muscle movement instantly. The device provides a seamless way to interact with computers - giving users an accurate sense of control. With the wave of a hand, 'MYO' transforms interactions by simply utilizing the electrical activity in muscles to wirelessly control video games, phones, and other digital products."
Watch this short video of this amazing gadget in action.





Russia to Build Asteroid Shield



Russia will complete a plan for a program to protect itself against threats from space by the end of this year, Civil Defense and Emergencies Minister Vladimir Puchkov said on Tuesday.  Read More


Time May Not Be a Fourth Dimension New Paper Suggests


There are all sorts of wacky hypotheses concerning the existence of time or the lack thereof (we should know, we've covered a few of the less fringy of those clams before), but this is one that perhaps makes the most sense compared to the rest. A team of researchers have written two papers that claim time is not the fourth dimension of the universe as we are led to believe, but instead, time is merely the numerical order of change.  Read More
 
Ancient Mars Had Fresh Water and Could Have  Supported Life
 An analysis of a rock sample collected by NASA's Curiosity rover shows ancient Mars could have supported living microbes.

Scientists identified sulfur, nitrogen, hydrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and carbon -- some of the key chemical ingredients for life -- in the powder Curiosity drilled out of a sedimentary rock near an ancient stream bed in Gale Crater on the Red Planet last month.  Read More 
The Imaginarium
The Imaginarium's Clever and Imaginative Advertisement Award goes to the following






Imaginative, but a no no.


Kim Jong Piggy's North Korean Commandos in their 
newest camo.



Disney and Star Wars forthcoming release?




All marble.
Amazing!



Read the fine print.
Imagination: A