Press Release

Challenger Center Participates in the Team America Rocketry Challenge

By SpaceRef Editor
May 16, 2008
Filed under , ,

Alexandria, VA – Challenger Center for Space Science Education and the Jacksonville, Florida Challenger Learning Center from Kirby Smith Middle School will participate in the Team America Rocketry Challenge (TARC) on Saturday, May 17, 2008. Each year over 7000 students participate in TARC. The Challenger Learning Center from Kirby Smith Middle School is one of the top 100 finalists that will participate in the Team America Rocketry.

Aerospace Industries Association (AIA) and the National Rocketry Association (NRA) sponsored this one-time event in 2002 to celebrate the Centennial of Flight. Due to the great enthusiasm for this event and the support garnered from the aerospace industry it prompted both AIA and NRA to hold this event annually. This year, TARC participants are asked to design and build a rocket that can reach an altitude of 750 feet with the duration of the launch lasting no more than 45 seconds and return safely to the ground, all while carrying a fragile payload of two raw hen eggs.

Challenger Center for Space Science Education, the national organization for a network of over 50 regional Learning Centers, will be supporting the local Florida team and providing astronaut training activities for all event guests and participating students from across the United States. Students will be able to take a ride in the Barany chair, a spinning chair used to help pilots and astronauts adjust to disorientation, and to try their hand at tossing a ball using special glasses that simulates what it might be like to work on the space station.

For more information on Challenger Center please visit us at www.challenger.org

For more information on TARC please visit http://www.aia-aerospace.org/tarc/

Challenger Center for Space Science Education was founded in 1986 by the families of the astronauts of the space shuttle Challenger 51-L mission. It is dedicated to the educational spirit of that mission and impacts over 300,000 students and 25,000 teachers each year. Challenger Learning Center programs at 50 centers around the world continue the crew’s mission of engaging teachers and students in science, mathematics, engineering and technology. To locate a Challenger Learning Center near you, visit www.challenger.org.

For program information, please contact:

Shannon Rush, Development and Communications Associate
Challenger Center for Space Science Education, Alexandria, VA
703-683-9740; srush@challenger.org

SpaceRef staff editor.