BW students first in the nation to participate in new NASA space science experience
BW students took a walk in the footsteps of NASA astronauts over spring break, the first college students in the nation to pilot a new NASA educational program designed with the help of BW faculty.
The students arrived at Space Center Houston, gateway to NASA Johnson Space Center, on Sunday, March 5, to participate in "Space Center U" with the generous support of alumni donors who are underwriting the extraordinary experience.
Robotics, Rocketry, Cryogenics, scuba diving

In addition, they worked with dive instructors to learn scuba diving techniques taught to astronauts to prepare for microgravity in space. "The underwater building challenge was really fun, and having the fastest time ever seen by the instructors was really cool," said physics major Garrett Witzke '19.
The students also toured NASA's Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory, where dive training takes place for real, and watched as two astronauts suited up and were raised by a crane into the pool where a mock-up of the International Space Station was submerged.
Learning Laboratory for NASA

Jim McCargar, Ph.D., associate dean of the School of Natural Sciences, Mathematics and Computing worked with NASA to set the stage to elevate the curriculum of an existing week-long program for high school students to a more robust experience for college students.
"This program fits with our focus on experiential learning and may inspire some of these students to pursue careers related to space science," said Dr. McCargar. "Our NASA Space Center U colleagues approached this BW experience as a 'learning laboratory' to explore what works best with college-age students."
Dream Come True
Senior
physics
majors
Bo
Royer,
III
'17
and
Callie
Jakuszeit
'17
served
as
student
leaders
for
the
trip.
"We
still
cannot
believe
we
had
the
chance
to
spend
spring
break
at
Space
Center
Houston.
It
was
a
dream
come
true,"
said
Royer.
Being immersed in the complexities of exercises like Mars rover construction really pushed physics major Lauren Kasper '20 to think critically. "You really need to take everything into account when thinking about the work that your robot will be doing, such as the terrain, the spacing and height of obstacles, grip of the wheels, etc."
In addition to Jakuszeit, Kasper, Royer and Witzke, students who made the trip are computer science major Kyle Ray '20; mathematics majors David Golembiowski '19, Helen Nguyen '18 and Marissa Samsel '19; and physics majors Justin Malavé '17 and Kyle Pellegrin '17. Computer science professor Ken Atchinson, and physics lecturer and retired NASA aerospace engineer Paul Penko, Ph.D., accompanied the students to Houston.
Fueled by Alumni Vision and Generosity

BW graduate Susan Bixler, working with the Center for Innovation & Growth, set the idea in motion, and the can-do collaborative of BW alumni, faculty and staff brought the opportunity to life.
Students will report back to the BW community on their experience during BW's expanded 2017 Ovation celebration in April.