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

Sunday, January 23, 2022

Honors Night at the Space Center. Training New Flight Directors. Intolerance - The Story That Lives On and On and On and On..... Imaginarium Theater

Honors Night at the Christa McAuliffe Space Center. January 13, 2022

     Honor's Night was held on Thursday, January 13 at the Christa McAuliffe Space Center.  Honors Night is the Space Center's way of celebrating the accomplishments of its staff and volunteers.


Tabitha Ricks welcomed everyone to Honors Night.  Tabitha is the Space Center's volunteer coordinator.  The first to be mentioned were the Center's newest volunteers.  


Kayden, Mitch and Rylan were honored for getting their Galileo pass.


Cecily and Mitch were honored for getting their Odyssey pass.


Natalie Anderson presented the pins and took great pride in presenting them to the congregation.  


Aaron, Mitch, and Henson were presented their Magellan pins for completing the requirements to get the Magellan pass.  Connor Larsen in the Magellan's Set Director. He attended the meeting remotely from North Carolina.  


The newest members of the Apprentice Guild received their patches for volunteering 500 hours.  


Jackson received his Hitchhiker patch for volunteering 1000 hours.


Tyler joined the ranks of Journeyman by surviving 5 years at the Space Center


Audrey Henriksen receiving praise from Mr. Porter


Two ancient souls joined the Time Lords at Honor's Night:   Scott Wiltbank and Audrey Henriksen



Matt Ricks was honored for his ten years of service at the Space Center.  Matt and Tabitha met at the Space Center and married.  They are expecting their first child in February.  Matt works as a computer programmer for a day job, which pays him enough so he can continue to volunteer his time and talents at the Space Center as the Engineering Guild Master and Planetarium Navigator.  You can never say enough good about Matt Ricks.  He is an old soul who is on his last incarnation in this mortal form.  I'm grateful for all the help he has given me over the last 10 years.  He is a friend to all. 


Emma and Cecily were both welcomed as new members of staff.  Emma works as a planetarium navigator.  Cecily works as a Magellan supervisor and is training to become a flight director



Katie Young will be retiring from space service soon.  She is an Odyssey flight director and Cassini supervisor.  Mr. Porter presented Katie with her space pillowcase as a retirement gift.  


Mr. Porter was happy to present Tyler and Wes with their Flight Director Blues.  Both are newly minted Magellan Flight Directors.  They are official now and no longer have to wear their Supervisor Blues when they fly the Magellan.  


Jon Parker with Micah Clegg

And finally, an old face from the past has returned to the Space Center family.  Micah Clegg is the son of Aleta Clegg and grew up at the Space Center working beside his mom.  Micah has returned to space service and made his first Honors Night appearance in many years.  I caught Micah and Jon after Honors Night sharing memories of the good old days.   

There was another new honor given at Honors Night that I won't mention here.  The Honor, and the recipient, will be highlighted in next week's Troubadour. 

Mr. Williamson

Training New Flight Directors.  It is What We Do.

Livy Charles in the Voyager's Flight Director's Seat surrounded by her Space Tech crew.
Mr. Funk is giving the "good job but not a pass" thumb sign.

     Training new flight directors is an ongoing process at the very heart of our Space EdVentures community. New flight directors come onboard having learned their trade from experienced flight directors who retire to find life outside the control room.  
     The art of flight directing can trace its origin back thousands of years to the first storytellers who employed vocal history as the way they passed their tribe's history from generation to generation.  The young learned by listening to and memorizing the stories. 
     Today we celebrate the training of new flight directors by highlighting someone in the process.  Please meet Livy Charles (pictured above).  Livy trains under the watchful eye of master storyteller Bracken Funk at The Space Place in Lehi, Utah.  She did her first test flight on Friday.  A few middle school students from Renaissance Academy's Space Tech Class made up the crew.  Space Tech students learn the science and art of simulators in education as an elective class. 
      She flew "Iron Curtain".  The mission went well but as you see with Mr. Funk's thumb signal, not a pass.  That's to be expected - it was her first solo test flight.  
     The Troubadour salutes all of you who are training to become flight directors. Learn your stories well and continue our traditions.....

Intolerance, The Story that Goes On and On and On....

Rool in the Voyager's Sick Bay having just been beamed aboard

Intolerance is one of the oldest missions told at the space centers in Utah County.  I wrote the mission in the 1990's as a field trip flight for 5th grade classes.  Fifth graders in Utah study US history. Slavery and the Civil War is part of the curriculum.  The mission was successful from its first telling and has remained so all these years later.  

Rool on the Voyager's Bridge helping the 5th grade Dragon squadron
learn his language so they can communicate. 

      Today, the escaped slave Rool makes weekly appearances at The Christa McAuliffe Space Center as part of their field trip and private mission programs.  Intolerance is also told at Renaissance Academy's The Space Place and American Heritage's Space Center as part of the schools' Young Astronaut / Voyager Club simulator club curriculum.  At The Space Place the story is told to the 5th grade squadrons in an 8 month long LDM mission. At American Heritage, 5th grade students do the mission in one full school day field trip to their own space center. 


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

Monday, January 17, 2022

The Farpoint Jumpship Discovery Launches at American Heritage School in American Fork. What a Great Addition to the School's Curriculum. See the First Students to Fly and the Ship's Cool New Equipment

        The Farpoint Jumpship Discovery launched and completed its space trials during the first week of January.  The Discovery is the American Heritage Space Center's flagship at their American Fork campus.  Alex DeBirk, a long time volunteer and staff member of the Christa McAuliffe Space Center and the Starship Voyager at Renaissance Academy, is the director.  He has been working late into the night and weekends for the past few months in preparation for the launch.  And while the Discovery isn't completely finish (no simulator ever is no matter how long it has been open) it was certified space worthy.  The following are photos of the jumpship's first crews. 











The Discovery's Logo


The Discovery's Warp Core

     The Discovery has a small sick bay just off to the left of the Bridge.  Attached to the sick bay is a small warp core access room called "Bridge Engineering".  The jaw dropping prop in the room is the warp core engineered by Alex DeBirk.  The warp core has diffused led lights capable of doing patterns. The software to create the pulsing pattern was written by one of the school's parents. 



Alex DeBirk and the parent who programmed the warp core and is currently working on a new method of distributing power within Thorium

The Discovery's new power distribution program to be
incorporated within Thorium.  It take power distribution to then next level by adding some realism to the process and a whole bunch of animated coolness

The Cool Everything Box in the Discovery's Control Room


The Everything Box in the Discovery's Control Room. It does everything from
control the lights to play sound effects to run video plus more. It is amazing and each button is a monitor so you can change the name of the button using software.


The Discovery's Sick Bay


The Discovery has a small sick bay off to the left of the bridge.  The sick bay took an idea from the original Starship Voyager at the CMSC and has a three level bunk bed.  The area under the bottom bunk is a crawl space with a secret access hatch to the hallway separating the Discovery from the Galileo.  The sick bay is lined in FRP panelling - a tribute to the original Phoenix. 

The FRP panelling

     I stopped by to offer Alex some help organizing the school's Young Astronaut Club last Friday.  All American Heritage School students from grade 5 to 12 will take an inhouse field trip during the school year. They spend half the school day in science and engineering classes correlated to the mission and the other half of the day in the simulator.  Alex and I worked through multiple break out sessions to strengthen the curriculum of the mission and to properly tie the mission's theme to the classroom presentation.  
     Alex has done a tremendous job creating the space center at American Heritage.  It will bring engaging missions and lessons to the school's students for decades to come.  His work will also benefit the other Farpoint space centers (Telos University and The Space Place at Renaissance Academy). I look forward to conducting joint missions and possible competitions between the Young Astronauts at Renaissance Academy and American Heritage. 

Mr. Williamson 

Sunday, January 16, 2022

The Christa McAuliffe Space Center's Starship Phoenix Gets a New Set Director. Imaginarium Theater

It was an eventful night last Thursday at the Christa McAuliffe Space Center's Honors Night.  Several honors were bestowed by Mr. James Porter, along with a few of the Center's set directors.  Those honors will be highlighted over then next few weeks on The Troubadour. Today we want to make a big announcement heard first at Honor's Night. 

    

The Starship Phoenix has a New Set Director

Mason Perry Receiving the Phoenix Microphone from Jordan Smith

Jordan Smith recently graduated with a degree in computer programming and is actively seeking  professional employment.  Anticipating the move might come before the next Honor's Night, Jordan decided to pass the microphone before his official retirement.  Mr. Porter invited all staff to apply for the position of Phoenix Set Director.  Applicants were interviewed and a final decision was made. 

Attention, prepare for an important announcement. Hear Ye, Hear Ye.  Friends, Romans, Countrymen, lend me your ears.  Dominus Jameses Maximus Porterillius decrees that Mason Perry be appointed Set Director of the Starship Phoenix; so let it be written, so let it be done (forgive me blending my histories, it was done for effect). 

In a ceremony stretching back to the earliest days of the Space Center, Jordan Smith - the current Set Director handed the ship's flight director microphone, spittal and all, to the new Set Director.  Mason accepted the microphone signalling his acceptance of the calling and his willingness to steer the ship along the course set by the Jordan's hard work and firm hand on the rudder.  

Mason is an outstanding gentleman, scholar, and good judge of science fiction simulator stories.  Jordan trained him well and is pleased with the appointment.  

Mason's first decree was a changing of the Phoenix logo.  For the past several weeks Mason was in design mode, sketching the logo then making a color change here and a tuck there. He just happened to have his new logo on hand to show everyone at Honor's Night.   


Being a current Space Center Cassini Flight Director, I have early access to bits of news.  One afternoon I asked Mason to put the logos up on the ship's two front monitors to see how it dressed the room.  What do you think?



I like the logo.  The seven feathers represent the seven stations on the ship.  Mason has done well, but then he always has.  

This makes Mason the Phoenix's Sixth Set Director.

1.  Megan Warner
2.  Alex Anderson
3.  Dave Daymont
4.  Miranda Rendell
5.  Jordan Smith
6.  Mason Perry

Congratulations Mason Perry on your appointment to Phoenix Set Director and a heartfelt Thank You! to Jordan Smith for doing a bang up job transitioning the Phoenix from the old Space Center to the new.  Your mark Jordan will be on the ship as long as she flies.  

More on the Space Center's Honor's Night next week. 

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