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NASA Honors
Student Winners
Is there usable
water on Mars? How does the space environment affect earthworms?
What is the effect of El Nino on whale shark migration? What does
a rocket flight sound like?
Students nationwide
tackled these and many other questions as part of the NASA Student
Involvement Program, or NSIP, competition. NSIP is a national education
program for grades K through 12 that links students directly with
NASA's diverse missions of research, exploration and discovery.
Through this
program, student experiments were selected in January 2002 to fly
on either a NASA suborbital sounding rocket in June or a future
Space Shuttle mission.
NASA's Stennis
Space Center in south Mississippi will host the NSIP National Symposium
for high school winners and their teachers May 5-8, 2002. The students
will present their winning projects from one of the following competition
areas: Design a Mission to Mars; Watching Earth Change; and Science
and Technology Journalism. Students and NASA scientists and engineers
will discuss issues raised by each winning team.
During June,
space flight student winners and their teachers will spend a week
at Wallops Flight Facility. During their visit the students will
work with Wallops personnel to make final experiment preparations
and get a first-hand look at the facility operations.
In addition,
those participating in the rocket project at Wallops will witness
the launch of their experiments, analyze the data and present their
findings to other students and NASA engineers and scientists.
For more on
the NSIP program, go to: http://education.nasa.gov/nsip
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