Training
Opportunities at NASA
The
Spaceflight & Life Sciences Training Program.
Many
excellent educational opportunities exist within the
United States Space Program. Students from all academic
areas are encouraged to get a general overview of all
available programs when applying, as more than one program
may be of interest.
Training
exists in fields as diverse as aeronautical engineering,
propulsion, mathematics, geology, astronomy, management,
biology, education and business. A small sample of the
types of program available include on-line workshops
at primary school level, work-study programs, undergraduate
internships in all fields, opportunities to conduct
experiments aboard NASAs altered-gravity KC-135
airplane, graduate level fellowships, and professional
development programs. National Aeronautics & Space
Administration (NASA) employees at the Education or
University Programs Offices at each NASA field center
can assist in finding a suitable program for students
at almost any educational level.
At
Kennedy Space Center, one undergraduate program combines
space biology, engineering, and ecology into a comprehensive
program about life in space, and what is required to
maintain a human presence in this unfamiliar environment.
The Spaceflight and Life Sciences Training Program (SLSTP)
is a six-week summer internship program, offering undergraduates
the opportunity to work hand in hand with scientists
who support current biology experiments on the space
shuttle, design future habitats for the International
Space Station, and to assess the impacts of shuttle
and rocket launches on the local environment.
As
part of the SLSTP, undergraduates spend approximately
60-70% of their time in the laboratory working on experiments
and engineering projects that are currently in development
or being performed at Kennedy Space Center. Typical
projects include maximizing food crops by adjusting
light intensities, recycling gray-water, optimizing
or testing new hardware, performing experiment management
functions, and using Global Positioning Systems (GPS)
and Global Information Sensing (GIS) Systems to evaluate
the success of habitat restorations.
The
remaining 30-40% of the students work time is
spent in a series of space engineering and life sciences
lectures. Each year, 20-30 visiting scientists and engineers
from NASA, academia, and industry speak to the trainees
about their work, how they arrived at their current
position, and discuss career options with the students.
The speakers and topics may vary from year to year,
but generally include astronauts speaking about the
challenges of working in an altered gravity environment;
flight surgeons talking about changes in the body -
both during spaceflight and during re-adaptation to
earths gravity - and engineers and payload managers
discussing recent life sciences missions. Other subjects
that are usually presented include theories of life
on Mars, new spacecraft, building the International
Space Station, establishing work colonies on the moon
or other planets, how NASA-developed sensing technologies
can be used for commercial uses, and learning more about
additional education opportunities and career options
within NASA and space related industries.
As
the NASA Center of Excellence for Launch and Payload
Processing Systems, Kennedy Space Center is an ideal
place for hosting the SLSTP. Most SLSTP alumni report
that although the research experience is invaluable,
a strong advantage of the program is that it allows
students to form important career contacts at the center
and beyond. Students meet visiting scientists from countries
the world over as they perform real-time operations
to prepare for a shuttle launch. Kennedy Space Center
trainees experience firsthand the urgency and complexity
of preparations that typically occur before a life science
experiment is launched. The students also learn the
value of space-flown material, and how scientists, often
of several different disciplines, form coordinated teams
in order to maximize the data that can be obtained from
each experiment.
Other
unique features of the SLSTP include the proximity of
Kennedy Space Center to other environments and area
attractions. Students with an interest in ecology will
appreciate the diverse habitats found on the Merritt
Island National Wildlife Refuge, which is co-located
with KSC, supporting studies in marshes, rivers, on
the ocean shore, and in scrub terrain. Likewise, threatened
and endangered species of plants and animals are being
monitored and habits restored using cutting-edge technologies.
NASA scientists have also established collaborative
hydroponics experiments with the nearby Walt Disney
World EPCOT Center. Each year, students have the opportunity
to get customized EPCOT tours and see large-scale vegetable
gardens as they might exist on an isolated spacecraft
or bases on other planets.
The
SLSTP is a competitive program that accepts 25-30 students
each summer, and is designed for undergraduates interested
in engineering, biology, chemistry, ecology, physics,
mathematics and the computer sciences. NASA selects
students for the program based on Grade Point Average
(GPA), letters of recommendation, general interest in
NASA, and by evaluating the ability to communicate through
a written essay about space and the students future
career goals.
Students
who are interested in the program but are not citizens
or resident aliens in the United States may apply to
the program with sponsorship from their national space
agency. Interested students should contact their space
agency directly to discuss an application process. If
a nation does not have a space agency, the potential
applicant can contact SLSTP personnel for advice on
where to find sponsorship from their government. Over
the next few years, it is expected that more and more
countries will opt to participate in the SLSTP, as the
International Space Station comes closer to completion
and nations work more closely together.
The
NASA Homepage at http://www.nasa.gov
will allow the student to navigate to the Educational
Office and to the University Affairs Office of the fourteen
individual field centers. Information on the Spaceflight
and Life Sciences Training Program is located on the
Internet at http://slstp.nasa.gov.
Authors
Patricia
Currier & Jerry Moyer
The
Bionetics Corporation
Kennedy
Space Center, FL
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