NASA needs astronauts, scientists, mathematicians, engineers, IT specialists, writers, technicians and many others working together to accomplish its lofty vision to discover and expand knowledge for the benefit of humanity. Learn how this work begins in K-12 classrooms.
Finn: Apollo moon landing marked a ‘giant leap’ for mankind — and education. Moonshot for Kids could launch the next leap forward https://t.co/nprDRU6You
— The 74 (@The74) July 17, 2019
Exactly 50 years ago today, we were on our way to the Moon! It was an honor to work with this crew and a privilege to complete the mission of a lifetime. #ApolloXI https://t.co/uaiXkzPNOu pic.twitter.com/14gwL8YFcu
— Dr. Buzz Aldrin (@TheRealBuzz) July 18, 2019
The Apollo 11 mission continues to inspire #STEM education for all children. We all know Buzz Aldrin, Neil Armstrong & Michael Collins, but did you know Katherine Johnson, NASA research mathematician, wrote the calculations for the trajectory to the moon? #Apollo50th pic.twitter.com/x3WT0tunpX
— FLChildren'sCouncil (@FLChildrensCoun) July 17, 2019
"Perhaps the most important technological legacy of Apollo is the inspiration it gave to several generations of scientists and engineers to pursue STEM education and careers." – Dr. David Miller of @AerospaceCorp #Apollo50th
— Science Committee (@HouseScience) July 16, 2019