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

Saturday, January 31, 2015

Two Simulators Launch in Pennsylvania! The Space Center Concept Spreads. The Imaginarium.

The Glorious Launch of the IKS Buccaneer

IKS-Buccaneer
Today the IKS Buccaneer officially launched in front of hundreds awe-struck young minds at Stewart Elementary School in the Burrell School District , Pennsylvania. 
Admiral Octavius, also known as the mild-mannered Brian Colgan, directed a non-stop day of back-to-back mini missions to give each of Stewart Elementary’s 200+ students a brief taste of the incredible journeys that are now available to them on a daily basis.
Brian-Colgan-at-Work
The result of a $20,000 STEAM grant and a healthy dose of passion and commitment on behalf of the Burrell School District, the IKS Buccaneer is the latest addition to the rich and forward-looking STEM curriculum that permeates all levels of Stewart Elementary.  We’re truly impressed at the quality of the Buccaneer and the dedication of its team at Stewart Elementary.  It has been an honor bringing this exciting new simulator to fruition.
And now, without further ado, here are so more photos from the momentous day.

The Launch of the IKS Dreamcatcher

IKS-Dreamcatcher-Bridge
The excitement just doesn’t stop!  Hot on the heels of the launch of the IKS Buccaneer, we’re thrilled to announce the launch of the IKS Dreamcatcher in Penn Hills Elementary.
DSC_1036 Guests gathered in the school’s large cafeteria where they were greeted by an entourage of flight directors wearing stunning flight suits—I’m sooooo jealous!  They even have the school’s emblem, Dream Flight logo, and words “Flight Commander” embroidered onto the suit.  They looked incredible!
Upon arriving, each guest was given a name tag with a crew assignment—four crews in total—for their upcoming mission.
The event kicked off with some nice remarks from the district’s forward-thinking administrators, followed by a somewhat fumbled delivery of a speech by Admiral Zenobia and myself.
Then, our attention became focused on the big screen as our mission briefing began to play.  Earth was in danger, and one by one the crews were called upstairs to board the IKS Dreamcatcher on a short mission in its defense.
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While waiting for their turn, each guest had the wonderful opportunity to chat with some of Penn Hills Elementary’s brightest young minds as they discussed their favorite missions and crew stations.  They were buzzing with enthusiasm for the simulator and the adventures they had had inside.  They described the gripping dangers they faced and how they used their wits to come out victorious.
They also told me about their ideas for new missions and adventures—which was one of the most exciting and satisfying parts of the night.  I simply love seeing how Dream Flight Adventures is inspiring a new generation of dreamers, thinkers, and doers!
Then, the alarm rang and it was our time to board the Dreamcatcher.
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Notice the swarm of student-made dreamcatchers that fill the briefing room.  I was surprised to learn that the students had been making these for years and the launch of the IKS Dreamcatcher was just a happy coincidence.  Also, I loved the mission posters framed and mounted on the wall—it gave a very classy look to the briefing room.
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The inbound crew passes through the mystic curtain…
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And enters the Dreamcatcher’s bridge where they received some final guidance from Admiral Conundrum.DSC_1066
It was a magical night, and one of the crowning moments was when a student told me “Thanks for inventing this.  It’s awesome!”

Burrell Students Embark on Educational Adventure

Liz Hayes from Trib Total Media attended yesterday’s launch event for the IKS Buccaneer and wrote a fantastic article about it.  
Stewart Elementary School students on Tuesday narrowly escaped from an erupting volcano, survived a pandemic disease, and were submerged to the depths of the Atlantic Ocean.They accomplished all this and more without leaving the classroom of science teacher Brian Colgan. Burrell School District formally started the IKS Buccaneer — an adventure simulator that administrators believe will help students develop teamwork, critical thinking and creative skills.
“This is the future of education,” said Stewart Principal Greg Egnor, “and we're on the cutting edge.”
The district converted a former science lab into a setup that uses a flat-screen television, hand-held tablets and special effects to resemble a mission control flight deck straight out of science fiction. Superintendent Shannon Wagner has likened it to the starship Enterprise from “Star Trek.”
A team of about 17 students is tasked with completing missions that include determining whether a volcano will erupt and wipe out a tourist destination; saving diplomatic relations between two civilizations by curing a plague; and preventing a time warp from changing the history of the sinking of the Lusitania and altering the outcome of World War I.
The students — dubbed the Infinity Knights — are given individual roles such as pilot, engineer, gunner, doctor and hacker. They must work together to solve problems, including the surprise hurdles Colgan throws in their path in his role as flight director.
Egnor said the simulator meshes well with the school's focus on science, technology, engineering and math concepts, but also pulls in other topics including history, health, literature and social issues.
The Vesuvius lesson deals with volcanoes, plate tectonics and geology, but it also considers economics and emergency preparedness. The Pandemic mission blends immunology and anatomy with the history of the Spanish conquistadors and Aztecs. The Lusitania mission combines marine biology and sonar with World War I history and literary references to “20,000 Leagues Under the Sea.”
Egnor said the simulator at first will be used as an “internal field trip,” but he sees the missions eventually getting worked into the curriculum.
The program, developed by Pittsburgh-based Dream Flight Adventures, so far has seven scripted missions plus three “create your own” options that can be built off the space, ocean or anatomy base themes. Creative director Gary Gardiner said as more missions are developed, they'll be added to Burrell's catalogue.
Gardiner and his wife, Sarah Gardiner, designed the program in their living room a few years ago. After presenting their concept at an educational conference, Shaler Area School District became the first to commission a simulator two years ago. Burrell has the second simulator, and three more districts will be starting soon, including Penn Hills on Wednesday. Gary Gardiner credits an immersive space camp experience when he was in fifth grade with providing the inspiration for Dream Flight Adventures, which is about to “go global” as the family prepares to move to England to collaborate with a British theme park company. Egnor said Gardiner helped the district acquire $20,000 in grant money from the Allegheny Intermediate Unit, the Grable Foundation, and the Benedum Foundation to fund Burrell's simulator.
The district's maintenance staff began converting the classroom into the simulator in the fall. Since construction occurred behind closed doors, Tuesday was the first day most students saw the new technology.
“I like being able to control the ship and work together with my friends,” said fifth-grader Michael Blubaugh, who piloted the IKS Buccaneer for several demonstrations.
Alison Hughes, a fourth-grader, said she enjoyed being the team's communicator and hacker during the Vesuvius mission. She was looking forward to the anatomy mission.
Amelia Sallach, also in fourth grade, wanted to experience more of the underwater missions.
“I like how it teaches us about the environment and space, all while we're having fun,” Sallach said. “I think it's just really cool.

Read more: http://triblive.com/neighborhoods/yourallekiskivalley/yourallekiskivalleymore/7645181-74/simulator-burrell-district#ixzz3QRo55ehX Follow us: @triblive on Twitter | triblive on Facebook

The Imaginarium







































































Sunday, January 25, 2015

The Farpoint Voyagers Met Yesterday to Prep for their First Long Duration Mission. The Magellan's New Lighting System. The CMSEC Does the Nearly Impossible. Connor's Evil Magellan Departure Sequence. News on the Falcon Simulator's Opening. The Magellan's Transition from Babylon 5 to Star Trek. The Galileo Switch Over to iMacs. New Computer Controls. The Odyssey's New Engineering Station.. The Imaginarium

Hello Troops,
The Farpoint Voyagers Space and Science Club met yesterday at Renaissance Academy.


There were nearly 60 people in attendance.  The cadets sat with their Long Duration Mission teams to receive instructions and the LDM mission briefing.   



The cadets listed and took notes as Emily Paxman gave the mission briefing.  Well.... almost all the cadets. A few in the Phoenix team seemed more interested in me than Emily.
Carter is always happy so he gets a pass this time.  



Brittney VandenBos spoke about leadership and the importance of teamwork. The cadets spent time with their squadrons and coaches discussing their individual strengths and weaknesses.  Squadron mission statements were also on the morning agenda.  

Our adult coaches have their work cut out for them. They need to take a collection of individuals and turn them into effective teams able to survive the upcoming mission challenge AND score the winning points to be names Top Team.

Our Long Duration Mission Squadrons

The Teams and Their Coaches

Phoenix Squadron
Nautilus Squadron
Kraken Squadron
Scorpio Squadron
Prometheus Squadron
Alex Debirk (Coach)Bracken Funk (Coach)Christine Grosland (Coach)Brittney VanDenBos (Coach)Bradyn Lystrup (Coach)
Jay Johnson (Asst. Coach)Matt Long (Asst. Coach)Brandon Engles (Asst. Coach)Dave Daymont (Asst. Coach)BJ Warner (Asst. Coach)

The Cadet Captains of the Squadrons


1. Zachary Hodgson (Captain)
1. MacKenzie Seidel (Co-Captain)
1. Bradyn Shelley (Captain)
1. Jessa Lethbridge (Captain)
1. Harrison Briggs (Captain)
                              2. Drake Hansen 
                                             Co-Captain

The first Time On Bridge (TOB) is scheduled for Saturday, February 7th from 7:45 to 10:15 A.M. on the Space Center's Magellan.  The Nautilus Squadron volunteered to be the first out of the gate.  

Watch the blog for updates on the LDM. 

The Magellan's Lighting System Goes High Tech

I'd like to show off the Space Center's newest technological achievement, computer controlled lighting.  




The Magellan's lighting has been upgraded from off and on switches with dimmer knobs operated by hand to a cool computer system with presets for different types of lighting.  



Everything is controlled through the Chauvet box you see above mounted between the flight director and second chair.





The Magellan Flight Director can preset any number of lighting combinations from the standard bridge white lights to the always attention getting power loss and brownouts, to red alert lighting to the "shaking of the lights" during battle scenes.

 The CMSEC Does the Nearly Impossible.  A Joint Four Simulator Mission

You heard it first right here in The Troubadour.  Two Saturday's ago the Space Center (CMSEC) did a four simulator joint mission.  The Magellan, Odyssey, Phoenix, and Galileo joined forces and did one mission for a large crew.  

How do you pull off a four simulator joint mission?  The Space Center staff did it the new fashioned way - facetime.  



Connor sits in the Magellan Control Room directing his portion of the mission and facetimes with Alex Anderson in the Phoenix Control Room. On the spot and instant communication keeps the four crews together in the story.  It was fun to watch these professionals in action.



Nathan is seen in the photo above flight directing the Odyssey's portion of the joint mission. Farpoint Cadet Scott W., runs his second chair. 


 
Alex is seen above in the Phoenix Control Room flight directing and coordinating events with the other flight directors.



Connor's Evil Magellan Departure Sequence

Connor L., made sure I stayed in the Magellan Control Room long enough to watch his crew struggle to get the Magellan out of space dock.   



Look how he has the crew penned into a corner.  The crew's first officer had a difficult time getting the ship out using thrusters only.  There are more "Collision Alert's" issued in one of Connor's departure sequences than in a month's worth of other CMSEC simulators. Is it fair? NO.  Could a computer handle the departure better than a human? YES. Will Connor let the ship's computer "Take the ship out?"  NO.  Is this pure evil on Connor's part?  YES!
Will the CMSEC Director do something about it?  PLEASE DON'T.  It's too fun :)  
   
RePosts from the Space Center's first (Now Retired) Blog SpaceEdVentures.


Post from June 9, 2000.   
News on the Falcon Simulator's Opening. The Magellan's Transition from Babylon 5 to Star Trek. The Galileo Switch Over to iMacs. New Computer Controls. The Odyssey's New Engineering Station.
Hello Voyagers!Yesterday we completed our first summer overnight mission. We now register our campers in the cafeteria instead of the gym. The gym is being refinished. A special pat on the back goes to Mark Daymont, Kyle Herring, and Dan Adams (our principal) for the dedicated round the clock work they have put in over the last week getting the Falcon up and running. Intel engineers are still programming the Mars Base controls for PC and told us they wouldn't be ready for the opening of the season. Instead we had to improvise and that's what we did.  
The Falcon opened for OV1 as a mysterious rescue pod left on Mars by an alien race 1000 years ago.The kids assigned to the Falcon discover it and then spend their 2.5 hours learning what it is, how it got there, and how to operate it. Of course they can count on several surprises along the way. 
Another pat on the back to Allan Stewart, Kyle Herring, and Dan Adams for the Galileo. This last week the Galileo was refit with imacs. That involved remodelling the computer desks in the simulator. Allan has finished the new Galileo controls. 
The Magellan is also being worked on. Allan Stewart is programming ihyperspeed to give the Magellan its new Federation look. The Magellan told its last Babylon 5 story yesterday. Tonight, the Magellan sets sail as a Federation Starbase for OV2. Chris Aldridge worked with Allan into the wee hours of the morning finishing up and getting ready. Kyle has installed new CCTV cameras in the Magellan as well. 
David Merrill reports success for the Odyssey's first summer mission. The Odyssey's new engineering section worked well. 
 The Voyager's new captain's quarters was painted by Aaron Yeager, Brady Young, and Daniel Story. It is almost ready for occupants. Two of our elite Voyagers ran the control room without senior staff help! A special pat on the back to Justin Leavitt for running the 2FX station and to Andy Heaton who ran video and the phones. They did a great job! A special salute to Bryce Redd who played his first Voyager doctor and got more votes than our senior staff. 
OV 1 went very well. We are all excited about the summer season. Remember, the staff field trip on June 14th. Some of you still need to tell me if you are going. We can't go to Salt Lake Airport -waited too long to book it and they were full. The planetarium is still a go and the zoo. I'll be sending an email parent permission form so look for that this weekend.  
All the Best Voyagers and Friends!Mr. Williamson

What we do.....

There are some people who live
in a dream world, and there are
some who face reality; and then
there are those who turn one into
the other -- Douglas Everett

Troops,

We are the ones who make dreams a reality for thousands of people a year in all the simulators descended from the USS Voyager, wherever they may be. I take great pride in what we have collectively accomplished and what is yet to come in 2015!

Mr. Williamson 

  
The Imaginarium