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

Saturday, October 28, 2017

A Salute to the Space Center's One Day Weekenders! What it was like to Work on Fridays (Field Trip, Private Missions and Overnight Camp) During the Space Center's Voyager Era. The Imaginarium.

Hello, Troops,
Another Post from the past.  This comes from October 2008. 
Did you ever wonder what it was like to work an entire Friday and Saturday at the Christa McAuliffe Space Education Center during the Voyager Era - the time of double field trips, weekend overnight camps (yes, nearly every weekend year-round), five simulators busy morning noon and night?  Today's Post from the Past opens the door to that time long ago.  They were good times, hard, challenging, tiring, but good.....

Mr. Williamson  

My seat for 23 years in the USS Voyager's Control Room
October 2008
Hello Troops,
When I left the Space Center on Saturday evening I said, "Enjoy your Only!" to Emily and Stacy. They wondered what I meant. I explained that most of us that work at the Center get one day off a week. We call our weekends our 'Onlys". I want to use this post to give Three Cheers and a hip hip hooray to all of us that toil six days a week! We work Monday to Saturday in our simulators, classrooms, junior and senior high schools or universities.


What does Friday mean to many in the workforce? It means the weekend is coming like a brilliant sunrise after a long dark workweek. What does Friday mean to us at the Center? It means the long dark night! Friday is our longest work day because it spills far into Saturday.

I'm writing this post to share my weekend schedule with our newer staff and volunteers. This will help you understand why I'm a bit focused and tired during camps. I want to impress one thing on your mind. Don't be afraid of hard work. I have always worked hard. Did you think the Space Center just appeared out of thin air? If you want something in life you need to set goals and then WORK for it. If you're lucky enough to get a full weekend then Great! If you are like me and get an Only instead, then consider the fact that you're in good company with most of us that work at the Space Center.

My Friday begins at 7:00 A.M. when I leave my home for Wal Mart. There you'll find me, along with the other members of the Early Risers Club, wandering around the store pushing our metal supports with wheels. We pass each other at least twice in our elongated laps. As we pass we nod as a greeting and an acknowledgment - the unspoken club sign given to recognize the fact that at that hour of the day you always get to the checkout and forget something you were to buy.

I fill my cart with the overnight camp necessities. I feel I can do it in my sleep. I fall asleep as I approach the bakery and awaken at the check stand with a cart full of supplies. It's kind of like driving down the road and listening to the radio. When you arrive at your destination you realize you don't remember passing anything along the way. You just got there. It is like your brain drives the car in autopilot while your conscious self is carried away in a stupor.

At 7:40 A.M. I'm unpacking the groceries at the school. This is the worst part of Friday! I hate unpacking groceries. At 8:00 A.M. I’m starting up the simulators and inflating the Starlab. At 8:15 A.M. I can sit down for a few minutes and answer phone calls and emails. At 8:45 A.M. I'm heading outside wearing my bright orange hunting vest. I walk to my designated cross guarding station ready and waiting to hurl myself into the path of any oncoming car that fails to yield to our crossing students. I'm the first school employee they see so I wear my "friendliest guy in the world" face and greet them each as they cross. Staff and volunteers, I know you're wondering why you don't get to see that overly friendly face when you come to work the overnighters - right? Well, by the time you arrive that face's `sell by date' has expired and you get to see the real foundation beneath it. Frightening isn't it?

At 9:00 A.M. I leave the fresh air and advance into the Discovery Room where my Pre-Algebra class is waiting with books out and eager faces telling me they are expecting another awesome `Victor Williamson Math Extravaganza!" My heart skips a beat when I realize I had forgotten to even look at the lesson for the day but they will never know. I'm a professional teacher. If I can't waffle out a great lesson once in awhile at a glance then I'm not worth my paycheck.


At 9:45 A.M. Mrs. Houston takes over for me so I can start the field trip. At 9:50 A.M. I’m standing on the Bridge of the Voyager greeting the Field Trip crew as they ascend the stairs carrying their boarding passes. I greet each one with what is left of my "friendliest guy in the world" face. I'm well into the Voyager's first mission of the day.

At 11:30 A.M. my first mission ends and the NASCAR race begins. I slip on my racing jacket covered with advertising stickers and race around the bridge doing lap after lab getting the ship ready for the next crew. It's 11:45 A.M. and the afternoon crew is ascending the spiral staircase onto the bridge. I'm standing there collecting their boarding passes wearing my "I haven't had a chance to recharge since 7:00 A.M." face. The entire flight process starts again.
At 1:40 P.M. the field trip pulls away in their bus. We shut the ship down.
I have until 4:00 to:

  1. Do the weekly deposit.
  2. Answer phone calls.
  3. Answer nearly 20 emails - all needing a response.
  4. Create the work schedule for the next week - daily staff and student staff.
  5. Update the YahooGroup databases.
  6. Give everyone that comes in to talk to me the time they need. That can take hours of my time each week but that’s OK. I'm in the people business. In this business, I need to be available to people when they want to say hello or have a question or need advice. Staff and volunteers are always welcome to come bend my ear. My other work can always be done another time.
  7. Write a letter of recommendation or two.
  8. Buy needed supplies on the internet.
  9. Update the Center's books and accounts.
  10. Set up the trash cans and tables in the cafeteria and gym.
  11. Answer the mail and do the registrations that come in.
This workload can go up or down depending on what Mrs. Clegg was able to do during her office time. Aleta is my office assistant. Her help has freed me up to do many other things I’d never be able to do otherwise.

At 4:00 P.M. I’m greeting the private mission groups as they arrive. At 4:15 P.M. I can go home to get ready for the overnight camp. It is 5:30 P.M. and I'm back at the school getting the overnight camp ready to go. At 6:15 P.M. the staff meeting begins. From that point on I'm:

  1. Signing in the campers.
  2. Giving my "Welcome to Camp" speech. Then it's dividing the campers into their teams.
  3. I work with the staff setting up cots and blowing up air beds in the gym.
  4. I put the Starlab Planetarium away and make my outside walk checking the school doors
  5. I'm back to my desk doing office work until 11:00 P.M.
  6. At 10:50 P.M. I'm setting out the ice cream and trying to stay awake.
  7. From 11:00 P.M. I'm getting the campers ready for bed and then down for the night.


It is 12:30 A.M. I finally get to lay down on my pad on the Briefing Room floor. The campers are in bed and I'm hoping I'll have some kind of a night's sleep. I've been pretty much running around nonstop since 7:00 A.M. That's seventeen hours straight - and the night is still young. During the night I can expect to be woken up by campers needing to use the bathroom. Some campers will want to call home because of headaches or homesickness. Sometimes I’m woken up by campers that have thrown up or had other accidents. It happens and is all part of the business.


It is 6:15 A.M. Saturday morning. I've had five hours of sleep (if I'm lucky). I get to my computer and type up the camper's hour certificates. At 6:45 A.M. I wake up the staff and the morning starts rolling. At 8:45 A.M. the campers finish breakfast and follow their Flight Directors back to their ships. I start work on the cafeteria. I clean the tables and floor. I take out the trash, put the tables up. Back to work at my desk. At 10:00 A.M. the camp ends. I begin tallying up the camp surveys. At 10:30 A.M. the staff meeting begins. We go over the tallied scores from the camper surveys and award the ‘Lord of the Votes’ and ‘Director's Trophy’. At 11:00 A.M. I go to the gym to supervise the staff dodgeball games. At 11:30 A.M. private missions arrive. I’m back at my desk

It is 2:00 P.M. and the 11:30 A.M. missions are leaving. My office work is finished. I close one set of bathrooms and head in with my towels and spray. I clean the bathrooms on the weekends that the custodian cannot. It is important the school has clean bathrooms for Monday morning. The rest of the afternoon I usually work on maintenance or meet with the Programming Guild.

At 5:00 P.M. I'm saying goodbye to our last missions of the day and checking the doors. It is 5:45 P.M. and I'm driving home for good. My one day weekend is starting!

This schedule I described is typical and I'm not the only one. Many of our good staff are putting in time like this. I want to salute all of you that give so much of yourselves to this job and the kids. I'm amazed at your dedication and willingness to sacrifice. I wish I could shower you with money and gifts but my gratitude will have to do. It isn't much but it is from the heart.

My Fellow One Day Weekenders - I Salute You!

Mr. Williamson

The Imaginarium











































































































































































 













































































Sunday, October 22, 2017

More Pictures from the CMSEC's Voyager Era. Dream Flight Adventures and Frazier Elementary School in Pennsylvania Announce the Opening of the IKS Niagara. CMSEC's New Simulator Pins are In. Donate Your Old Pins to a Great Cause. Theater Imaginarium.

Stephanie B., Rachel H., Caity L., Metta S., Stacy C., and Maren praying for Mr. Williamson's immortal soul in their overnight camp evening devotional before bedtime
Now We Lay Us All to Sleep
We Pray the Lord Our Camper's Souls to Keep
And If He dies Before He Wakes
We Pray the Lord Mr. Williamson's Soul to Take

More of the Newly Discovered Pictures from the Christa McAuliffe Space Education's Voyager Era

Yes, Troops, such was the devotion the staff and volunteers had for me during the CMSEC's Voyager Era.  I really enjoyed working with what I consider the finest staff a Space Center could desire. They were witty, talented, caring, compassionate, and true to each other and the Center.  

Were they really praying for me in the photo above? I'd like to think so, but to be honest, I'd say they were praying they wouldn't get caught staying up all night on one of the weekend overnight camps. Who knows the mischief this band of sisters got up to in the wee hours of the morning.  One day they'll come clean and confess their adventures.  One day....

                                     

This is Brooklyn Welch on the bridge of the Magellan. Brooklyn left the CMSEC to join the army and became a battlefield medic.  Brooklyn was amazing and made it a point to always stop by to say hello whenever she was in Utah.


The Post Overnight Camp Survey and Award's Honors is what you're seeing in the photo above.  I see a young Alex Anderson in his what I think are his Programming Guild Baby Blues.  And that young lady you see is none other than Megan Warner.  I don't remember the names of the young Black Shirts. Can you help?  

I know its the end of the Overnight Camp because 1) We're in the Discovery Room. 2) The Young Gentleman is enjoying his 2 sugar allotment for working an overnight camp.  Strange he chose the Welches Fruit Snacks as his choice of sugar. The Gift Shop must have been out of everything else. The fruit snacks aways went last with the Butterfingers and Heath Bars.  Either that or he purchased the snacks with real American money, not that phony Canadian stuff.   

Someone made a witty remark based on Alex's broad smile.  I'm sure it wasn't appreciated by a very exhausted Mr. Williamson who was standing just out of picture at the front of the room; trying his best to hurry things along because the 11:00 A.M. mission crews were gathering at the school's front door.

Ah, good times.....

Mr. Williamson  

Dream Flight Adventures and Frazier Elementary School, Perryopolis, Pennsylvania Announce the Opening of the Newest Ship in the Fleet: the IKS Niagara.

One of the first crew of the new IKS Niagara Located in Perryopolis Pennsylvania.

Location:  Frazier Elementary School — 142 W Constitution St, Perryopolis, PA 15473
Flight Directors:  Larry Sutton, Tanya Brawn, Danielle Angelo, and Jerry Strother
Crew Complement:  17
Plan a Visit:  The IKS Niagara primarily flies missions for students at Frazier Elementary School, but it will welcome visitors from other schools, districts, and groups from its surrounding community.  
Launch Date:  Fall 2017

Frazier Elementary School, Home of the newest Simulator in the Fleet of Voyager Inspired Simulators: the IKS Niagara
By Admiral Starblayze
Dream Flight Adventures

Hi Troops,
Today Dream Flight Adventures is delighted to share a few photos from the new IKS Niagara.  This simulator has been flying under the radar lately, as ships are wont to do when the school year kicks off, but Admiral Rigorious paid them a visit earlier this month and brought back a few juicy photos to share.



The ship is brand new, so LarryJerry (Will), Tanya, and Mike had the pleasure of sending the very first crew of test pilots on a dangerous mission.



The experience was hair-raising for the new Flight Directors, but the kids absolutely loved it!

Admiral Starblayze

IKS Niagara is Open, Bringing the Total Number of Voyager Inspired Simulators Worldwide to 56.  

It is always a pleasure to add another ship to the growing list of worldwide experiential simulators inspired by my first simulator, the USS Voyager built in 1990 at Central Elementary School in Pleasant Grove, Utah. The IKS Niagara belongs to the Dream Flight Adventures Fleet - our good friends with several simulators in Pennsylvania, Washington DC., and Venezuela.  Dream Flight Adventures was founded by Gary Gardiner. Michael Penn is the Director of North American Operations.   

Curious to see where your local simulator falls on this prestigious list.  Look near the top of the blog's right sidebar to find the link.

Mr. Williamson

The Christa McAuliffe Space Education Center Presents the Next Generation of Simulator Pins Available for Purchase Now, Just in Time for Christmas  


The Next Generation Logos of the CMSEC Simulators:  Magellan, Galileo, Odyssey, Phoenix

They are here! The CMSEC's newly minted simulator pins are ready to adorn your jacket, backpack or wherever you want to show support for your favorite simulator. Pick one up the next time you visit them for a birthday party or camp.  www.spacecenter.alpineschools.org   

Donate your Old Simulator Pins Toward a Good Cause


Warren Nuila Proudly Displaying his Lanyard with his hard-earned simulator pins.

The old pins and logos are collector items. The CMSEC still has a few of the old Phoenix pins for sale. The Voyager pins sold out long ago. The others more recently.  



Do you have a few of the old pins floating around your house gathering dust?  If so, would you consider donating the pins back to me?  


Mr. Williamson Awarding a young Erin with a pass off simulator pin at the post Overnight Camp De-Briefing

I'll use them to raise money towards the maintenance of the new USS Voyager at Renaissance Academy and the general fund of the Young Astronauts and Voyager Clubs.  Contact me at director@spacecamputah.org.

Thank you,
Mr. Williamson 

Theater Imaginarium
The Best Gifs of the Week Edited for a Gentler Audience