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

Sunday, June 6, 2021

The Voyager Club at Renaissance Academy Finishes the Covid School Year with Successful Flights. History is Made, A Report on the Christa McAuliffe Space Center's First Summer Camp in the New Building. Imaginarium Theater.

 Good Morning Troops,

     The Troubadour apologizes for the lack of recent updates from the Space EdVenturing World.  Mr. Williamson has been preoccupied with the closing of the school year and the start of the summer space camp season. 

     There is a lot to cover so let's get straight to business.

Ryker and Jackson on a successful landing party.
They are members of the Voyager Club's 7-8th Grade Flight Squadron

The Voyager Club at Renaissance Academy Finishes the School Year with Successful Missions

     We didn't know if we'd be able to operate a Voyager Club this year due to covid, but with the springtime easing of restrictions, the door opened and we got the ball rolling. Bracken Funk spent several weeks in the Starship Voyager getting it ready for the new mission.  Once the ship was ready, the invitation to join was issued.  We didn't know what kind of response we'd get with a part of the student body doing online learning and the lateness of the year.  But despite the roadblocks we were able to field 8 squadrons with nearly 100 students in grades 3 - 8. 

   

The Voyager Club's Monday Squadron

     Each squadron met three times and did a new mission written by myself and Bracken Funk.  

The Tuesday Squadron

     The cadets were masked up until the last week of school when the mask requirement was lifted.  The decision to not wear our standard uniforms was kept in place until the summer season. 

Carter did an awesome job commanding the Wednesday 1st Squadron

    We needed a new mission.  The majority of our cadets had been members of the school's Voyager Club for a number of years and knew the ship's library of flights.  It's surprising how quickly a mission can come together in a pinch.  The new mission is a good one - great story, lots of action, and very very few tactical cards required.    

The Thursday 3rd grade squadron did Intolerance

     The third-grade squadron did Intolerance. What a great all-around story.  


One of the Club's Friday Squadrons commanded by Max - the Great.

     The 2020-2021 Voyager Club has one more squadron to finish up on Monday and that will be it.  The start of the 2021-2022 school year means a new round of space service recruiting by Terran Space Command.  Next year's club will be open to students in grades 3 - 9.  

History was Made Last Week!  The First Summer Camp in the New Christa McAuliffe Space Center

Jon Parker Briefing the Cassini Crew on their mission "Greenpeace"

     
     The Space Center has always had summer camps (except last summer due to Covid) since the summer of 1991.  What makes this summer's camps unique is the fact that they are being held in the NEW Christa McAuliffe Space Center in the new starship simulators.  
     I was invited to join the camps this summer as a trainee in the new Cassini.  My job is to learn how to fly the ship.  I'll be honest when I say the new Thorium controls are more complicated than the old Voyager controls I last used during the summer of 2012, but with Jon Parker and Nolan Welch's patience, I feel confident I'll have them mastered in no time.   
     The camp started at 8:00 A.M. Monday, June 1 with a planetarium show "The Star Wars Planets".  I arrived just as Jon was assigning the cadets to their simulators.  Some things never change. If it wasn't for the planetarium surroundings you'd swear you were back in the old Central School gym with me at the front of a bunch of students assigning them to a ship with the flight directors all lined up nicely behind me waiting to receive their charges.  

There I am assigning cadets to their simulators back in June 2008

     I followed the Cassini team downstairs and onto the flight deck of Starbase Williamson (I sure love the sound of that :)
The cadets gathered around their flight directors in the large hallway to receive their bridge positions.  All except the Odyssey. For some reason, the Odyssey crew gets to use Central School's conference room - a throwback to the old school I guess. 
     While Jon briefed I took the opportunity to roam and snap a few pictures for the blog and for history. On a side note, I sure wish I had done something like this back in 1991.  It took me a while to understand the importance of documenting the history of an organization - especially one as unusual as the Space Center! 



     My first stop was the Phoenix.  The crew had just finished the briefing and was ready to launch. The captain gave me a thumbs up. He was ready for action.  What do you think of the new Phoenix?  Do you like it better, the same, or not as much as the old Phoenix? 
   



     The Phoenix was staffed by Jordan Smith (at the FD station) with Scott Wiltbank at second chair.  Maeson Perry was on standby for assistance.  


     My next stop was the Galileo Control Room so Lindsey could ask me for the highlight of my day.  "Working with all of you of course," I answered.  She gave me a smile and a thumbs up.  
 

The front of the Galileo Bridge



     While Lindsey was busy lifting everyone's spirits, Brylee Perry was in the Galileo briefing the crew.  I didn't want to become a distraction so I took my photo and escaped to the Odyssey to see what Tabitha and Matt Ricks were up to.




     Tabitha was found messing with the Odyssey's switch panel at the back of the bridge.  She was decked out in what appeared to be mercenary attire complete with a side blaster for emergencies.  Her face needed a good wash, but I was too polite to point it out.  I'm guessing it had something to do with the character she was playing, or so I hoped.    




     While his wife was fiddling the controls, Matt Ricks sat in the Odyssey Control Room pretending to flight direct the ship.  Bless his heart, he tries so hard.  I'm hoping someday, some Set Director will give Matt a shot at flying a ship.  Doesn't he deserve it after all the years he has wandered the halls of the Center looking for something constructive to do?  Matt, you come talk to me once I get passed off on the Cassini and I'll set things straight regardless of what Jon says.   



     While Matt was going "Vroom Vroom," in the Odyssey Control Room, Natalie Anderson had the ship's crew upstairs in the school's conference room briefing them on the mission.  It was going to be a great mission for sure.
     I snapped a few pictures as Cassini's well-trained volunteers
set the ship up for the crew's return from being captured by the ever painful Orion Pirates.  Those pirates seem to be lurking around every moon and asteroid throughout the Federation. How they got there, nobody knows - except their fearless leader Mad Dog.





     And of course, the pirates can't leave well enough alone.  They always find their way to the bridge of every ship they capture and always find a way to override the ship's computer safety features to break into the mainframe and alter the program or change the ship's course.  It's just what they do.  Who is more annoying, the Paklids or the Orion Pirates?   



      What's amazing is the speed at which the camps filled this year.  Mr. Porter opened the camps for booking on the Monday and had everything booked by the Friday.  I'm told there are 200 students on the camp's waiting list. 
    Will you agree with me that the summer's hottest ticket for fun and learning is a summer camp at the Christa McAuliffe Space Center?
     The Magellan and Falcon were closed for the first week of summer camp.  The Magellan spent the day running a test mission of its summer story (I'll post a story about that this week) and the Falcon is closed for a few weeks while Mr. Porter organizes staff and gets them trained.  
     Tomorrow starts the week with another camp, and I'll be there sandwiched between Nolan and Jon doing my best to stay out of their way while at the same time pushing their patience as best I can with questions.

Victor
        
Imaginarium Theater

The Week's Best Videos From Around the World Edited for a Gentler Audience


Sunday, May 23, 2021

A Goodbye to the Covid Year. The Imaginarium Theater

 Hello Troops,

A very busy week just passed so the best I can do today is post my new Imaginarium Theater.   I promise a more robust post next week.  

This is the last week of school and a goodbye to masks and the miserable year of Covid.  It was a very difficult year for my family as I'm sure for many of you as well.  I'm glad to see the end of the school year for that reason, but very sad to say goodbye to a fantastic group of 6th graders.  We went through this together and this year will be one for the books.

Mr. Williamson


Imaginarium Theater

The Best Videos From Around the World Edited for a Gentler Audience

 

Sunday, May 16, 2021

Connor Larson and Nicole VandenBos Return to the Magellan for the Summer Camp Season. Welcome Back! The New Simulators are busier than Ever! Imaginarium Theater.

 
Conner giving the Thumbs Up for a successful summer camp season

     The Magellan's Dynamic Duo are back!  Saturday saw the return of the Conner Larson and Nicole VandenBos.  They are the Magellan's best hope of sweeping summer camper votes this camp season. It was Conner's first mission after returning from school last week.  Nicole drove down from Heber where she teaches school.  The Space Center will be her summer job.   

Conner, Nicole, and staff for Conner's first private mission of the season.

     I finished my 1:25 P.M. planetarium presentation and made my usual Saturday rounds downstairs to the simulators to check out the action and rub shoulders with the gifted and talented of the simulator world. The Magellan, Cassini, Odyssey, and Phoenix were knee deep in story.

    There was an all too familiar voice coming from the Magellan control room. I popped open the door and there was Conner in a semi panic mode - this being his first flight in the new Magellan.  He was doing a great job, and if there were mistakes, he and Nicole were hiding them in great storytelling.  Nicole was at second chair. It was just like the old days. 

    The Magellan is a beautiful simulator as seen in the photos I took on the bridge.




     However, the Magellan wasn't the only ship flying yesterday afternoon.  Jon Parker and crew were telling a 5 hour Greenpeace story in the Cassini. 

 

     And across the hall from the Cassini Control Room is the Phoenix Control Room. Jordan was running a mission at the same time. 


     And around the corner the Odyssey was finishing up a story of their own with Tabitha, Natalie, and Tyler at the controls.  


     The ships may be new, but the spirit of the Space Center has always been its people and the people are there - the same ones who flew the original ship's last missions in the old Center are back to ensure the new Center has a great start.  

Imaginarium Theater
The Best Videos From Around the World Edited for a Gentler Audience.