ISS R&D, celebrating 20th year of humans continuously working and living onboard the ISS- focus on STEM

Accelerating Our Future In Space

November 2, 2020 begins the 20th year of humans continuously working and living onboard the International Space Station.

Join RDC to celebrate this engineering and scientific feat during the 2020 International Space Station Research and Development Conference (ISSRDC) Online Series.

Upcoming ISSRDC 2020 Events:

Plenary Day 3, October 22: View Agenda | Register

*** Focus on!!  ***  The panel 20 Years of STEM Experiments on the ISS  celebrates 20 years of student experiments using the ISS. The panel will begin with results from a new study of ISS education programs and their depth and reach. Panelists representing some of the major success stories will then share their experiences and insight. Panelists include representatives from Amateur Radio on the ISS (ARISS)—the first operational experiment on the ISS still in operation that has become an international program allowing students to use amateur radio to talk directly with ISS crew members, the Student Spaceflight Experiments Program—which engages thousands of students each year through in-orbit experiments, the Quest Institute—which has developed a series of low-cost ways for students to operate in-orbit experiments, EarthKAM—which enables thousands of students to take photos of Earth from the ISS, and the NASA HUNCH Program—a workforce development program in which students design and build experiments to be conducted on the ISS. Discussion will focus on the impact these experiences have on students and on the future of student experiments in space.

Moderator: Dottie Metcalf-Lindenburger, Earth Scientist Geosyntec Consultants, Former NASA Astronaut

Speakers:

Dan Barstow, Senior Education Manager, CASIS

Frank Bauer, Chair, Amateur Radio on the ISS

Jeff Goldstein, Program Director, Student Spaceflight Experiments Program

Blake Ratcliff, Program Manager, NASA HUNCH Program

Danny Kim, Chief Technology Officer, Quest Institute

Katy Martin, Program Lead, Genes in Space

 

Tnx @DG6BCE for the information!

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