NASA - NASA 50th Anniversary Essay Competition.
NASA 50th Anniversary Essay Competition. Part of NASA’s mission is to inspire the next generation of engineers, scientists, and explorers. NASA’s Innovative Partnerships Program, in conjunction with the Office of Education, conducted the NASA 50th Anniversary Essay Competition during academic year 2007-2008 to inspire and encourage middle school students to continue with science.
NASA 50th Anniversary Essay Competition. As NASA celebrates 50 years of scientific and technological excellence that have powered us into the 21st century, it reflects on signature accomplishments that are enduring icons of human achievement. Among those accomplishments are technological innovations and scientific discoveries that have improved and shaped our lives on Earth in a myriad of ways.
Vaneeza Rupani, a junior at Tuscaloosa County High School in Northport came up with the name, Ingenuity, and the motivation behind it during NASA’s “Name the Rover” essay contest.
NASA’s Mars 2020 rover is one step closer to having its own name after 155 students across the U.S. were chosen as semifinalists in the “Name the Rover” essay contest. Just one will be selected to win the grand prize — the exciting honor of naming the rover and an invitation to see the spacecraft launch in July 2020 from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida.
The Innovative Partnerships Program at NASA Headquarters, in conjunction with the Office of Education, announces the NASA 50th Anniversary Essay Competition for middle and junior high school.
Kids in the K-12 age brackets in the United States can offer their own name suggestions in NASA’s contest by submitting an essay (up to 150 words) with their suggestion and an explanation about.
A Canadian high school student has taken first place in an international essay competition held by NASA. Emma Peterson of Burnsview Secondary School in Delta, B.C., placed first in the.