The recent solar eclipse has renewed an interest in all things that occur in space. In addition, NASA has just concluded this year’s annual celebration of Space Week, which took place from April 6—13, 2024. During this celebration, teachers throughout the country explore a variety of lesson plans and hands-on experiments that teach STEM concepts in the classroom. Through these educational experiences, teacher provide their students with authentic content, hands-on inquiry-based experiences, and partner-driven collaborations. All of these events remind me of our nation’s Educator Astronaut program.
The Educator Astronaut Project is a program sponsored by NASA to educate America’s students about space exploration. Inaugurated in the 1990s, the program advances the objectives established in the original Teacher in Space Program from the 1980s. One of these objectives was to elevate teaching as a profession, and another was to inspire students to pursue careers in science, engineering, technology, and math (STEM). Another of the primary goals of the project is to give educators the skills and knowledge to use NASA-related content in their classrooms.
Educator astronauts are teachers, but they are also fully trained astronauts who fly aboard spacecraft as full-fledged crew members. They have duties and responsibilities that are the same as any other astronaut. In addition, they prepare lessons and demonstrations about space exploration for students in America’s classrooms.
To date, there have been four teachers who have been trained as educator astronauts. These teachers are Barbara Morgan of Montana; educator Joseph Acaba of Florida; Richard Arnold of Maryland; and Dorothy Metcalf-Lindenburger of Washington. New Hampshire educator Christa McAuliffe, the first participant in the Teacher in Space program, was classified as a civilian member of the crew. Tragically, she perished along with six astronauts in the space shuttle Challengerdisaster in 1986.
To read more about teachers in space, click on this link to Citizens in Space.org. To read more about the Educator Astronaut Project, click on this link to Revolvy.