Title: Inspire the Next Generation of Earth Explorers
1Inspire the Next Generation of Earth Explorers
ESSE 21 Steering Committee Meeting February 3-5,
2004
2(No Transcript)
3NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
Office of the Administrator
Sean OKeefe, Administrator Frederick D.
Gregory, Deputy Administrator John D. Schumacher,
Chief of Staff James L. Jennings, Associate
Deputy Administrator for Institutions and Asset
Management Michael A. Greenfield, Associate
Deputy Administrator for Technical Programs
Patrick A. Ciganer, Program Executive Officer
for Integrated Financial Management J.T.
Jezierski, White House Liaison John M. Grunsfeld,
Chief Scientist
Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel
NASA Advisory Council
Inspector General (W) Robert W. Cobb
Human Resources (F) Vicki A. Novak Assistant
Administrator
General Counsel (G) Paul G. Pastorek General
Counsel
Procurement (H) Thomas S. Luedtke Assistant
Administrator
External Relations (I) Michael F.
OBrien Assistant Administrator
Chief Financial Officer (B) Gwendolyn Brown Chief
Financial Officer
Equal Opportunity Programs (E) Dorothy
Hayden-Watkins Assistant Administrator
Chief Engineer (D) Theron Bradley Chief Engineer
Chief Information Officer (V) Patricia L.
Dunnington Chief Information Officer
Health and Medical Systems (Z) Richard S.
Williams Chief Health and Medical Officer
Small Disadvantaged Business Utilization
(K) Ralph C. Thomas II Assistant Administrator
Security Management and Safeguards (X) David A.
Saleeba Assistant Administrator
Institutional Corporate Management (O) Jeffrey
E. Sutton Assistant Administrator
Public Affairs (P) Glenn Mahone Assistant
Administrator
Legislative Affairs (L) D. Lee Forsgren Assistant
Administrator
Education (N) Adena Williams Loston Associate
Administrator
Aeronautics (R) J. Victor Lebacqz Associate
Administrator
Space Flight (M) William F. Readdy Associate
Administrator
Exploration Systems (T) Craig E.
Steidle Associate Administrator
Safety Mission Assurance (Q) Bryan D.
OConnor Associate Administrator
Biological and Physical Research (U) Mary E.
Kicza Associate Administrator
Space Science (S) Edward J. Weiler Associate
Administrator
Earth Science (Y) Ghassem R. Asrar Associate
Administrator
- Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center
- Jefferson D. Howell, Jr.
- John F. Kennedy
- Space Center
- James W. Kennedy
- George C. Marshall Space Flight Center
- David A. King
- John C. Stennis
- Space Center
- Thomas Q. Donaldson V
- Ames Research Center
- G. Scott Hubbard
- Dryden Flight Research Center
- Kevin Petersen
- Langley Research Center
- Roy D. Bridges
- John H. Glenn Research Center at Lewis Field
- Julian M. Earls
Flight Center Alphonso V. Diaz
January 15, 2004
JPL is a contractor-operated facility.
4Earth Science Applications Division (Code YO)
Code Y Interfaces
NASA HQ Interfaces Code G D.
Gayle Code H C. Webber Code I D. Carroll
P. Maliga Code L M. Broadwell Code P D.
Steitz Code R R. Norwood Code S J.
Garvin DoD Liaison N. Weinberg
Earth Science Applications Division
M.Cleave M. Shepherd G. Williams
YF D. McCuistion G. Paules
Adm. Assistants
Director R. Birk
R.Stevenson
YB T. Coleman A. Crouch C.
Miller D. Santa
Dep.Director M. Frederick
C. Thomas
NIMA Liaison
YS J. Kaye P. Decola
J. LaBrecque T. Lee D.
Wickland
T. Hennig
National Applications
Cross Cutting Solutions
Outreach
Education
Lead M. Frederick (acting)
Lead Ming-Ying Wei (Code N)
Lead K. Andersen
Lead L. Friedl
J. Collier
S. Ambrose
D. Schweizer (IPA)
P. Meister
J. Entin
P. Coble (IPA)
OR
J. Haynes
E. Sheffner
W. Turner (Code YS)
ED
CS
R. Venezia
NA
ESE Code YO Funded Programs Centers
ED
NA
CS
OR
ED
CS
NA
NA
NA
CS
NA
CS
OR
CS
ED
ED
ED
ED
NA
OR
SSC
GSFC
LaRC
MSFC
JPL
ARC
J. Arnold
D. Carstens (interim)
G. Stover
L. Beck
D. Tralli
M. Bambacus
K.Yuen
S. Habib
R. J. Birk___(on file)___________________
January 2004
5Enterprise Organization
Office of Education ? Code N Associate
Administrator Deputy Associate Administrator
Executive Officer Secretary
Education Advisory Committee
Liaisons Astronaut Public Affairs
Legislative Affairs Legal Equal
Opportunity Human Resources
Senior Policy Advisor
AAA for Org Effectiveness and Accountability
DAA for Education Programs
Center Education Programs
Space Flight Projects Office
Technology Products Office
Elementary Secondary Education Division
Higher Education Division
Education Support (Informal) Education Division
Minority University Programs
Biological Physical Research Education Programs
Space Flight Education Programs
Aerospace Technology Education Programs
Earth Science Education Programs
Space Science Education Programs
6National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Education Enterprise Strategy
www.education.nasa.gov
7NASA Education
- The Education Strategy
- Embeds education in all NASA research and program
activities - Unifies all NASA-sponsored educational activities
- Scientific and Technical Enterprises
- 10 NASA Field Centers
- Supports national and state education goals and
objectives - Seeks to increase the supply and diversity of
high achieving STEM graduates for . . . - NASA
- Industry
- University partners
www.education.nasa.gov
8NASA Education Approach
- Approach
- Integrate student programs into a seamless
pipeline and encourage continued student
affiliation with NASA - Community building Integration with broader ESS
community - Careers other NASA opportunities
9NASA Education Approach
- Approach
- Integrate student programs into a seamless
pipeline and encourage continued student
affiliation with NASA - Community building Integration with broader ESS
community - Careers other NASA opportunities
- Expand the pool of human capital to meet NASA
human resources needs - Embed education into every NASA flight and
research mission to inspire increasing numbers of
students
10NASA Education Approach
- Approach
- Integrate student programs into a seamless
pipeline and encourage continued student
affiliation with NASA - ESSE 21 community building
- Integration with broader ESS community
- Expand the pool of human capital to meet NASA
human resources needs - Embed education into every NASA flight and
research mission to inspire increasing numbers of
students - Achieve Program Excellence Education Operating
Principles - Development, implementation and evaluation
11NASA Education
12Operating Principles Customer Focus (94)
-
- Proposed Program Adjustments
- Chartering of the ESSE 21 Steering Committee
- Measures of Success
-
Success will be measured by the continued growth
and substantive involvement in the program from
undergraduate educators as proposers, associate
(unfunded members), users and developers of ESSE
21 content Continued community growth without
funding for individual schools
13Operating Principles Content (90)
- Proposed Program Adjustments
- ESSE 21 will highlight its commitment to
supporting content that extends NASAs investment
in Earth observation, research and modeling, all
of which are founded on the underlying STEM
disciplines. - Measures of Success
- Success measured by the continued
development, publication, and use, of shared high
quality Earth system science learning resources
in professional education journals and by digital
libraries - Use of resources by non-funded schools (ESSEA)
14Operating Principles Pipeline (80)
- Proposed Program Adjustments
- ESSE 21 will build community and broker
partnerships by actively seeking and recommending
opportunities for ESSE participants and their
students to become involved in other STEM
education programs. -
- Encourage faculty to emphasize career pathways.
- Measures of Success
- Statistics on course content, numbers of
courses, students enrollments, majors, degree
programs, demographic indicators, and other NASA
involvement will be assembled, building a history
of Program impact on students being served. -
- Statistics on communities served through
outreach activities - Student Tracking
15Operating Principles Diversity (87)
- Proposed Program Adjustments
- Active outreach to underrepresented groups,
e.g. partnerships between larger research
institutions and smaller minority institutions
community colleges tribal colleges, etc. -
- Measures of Success
- Demographics of students in ESSE 21
courses - Growth of ESS programs at institutions
with large underrepresented /
underserved populations - CIPA / ESSE 21 partnerships encouraged
and used as a measure of - the success of collaboration.
-
16Operating Principles Evaluation (83)
- Proposed Program Adjustment
- Evaluator tasked to provide leadership for
overall program evaluation -
- SC shares recommendations with the community
based upon individual team evaluations and the
efforts of the ESSE 21 Evaluator and Working
Groups. - ESSE 21 will actively report results via
Agency-level reporting mechanisms -
- Measures of Success
- Baseline of current ESSE 21 activities will
be established. - Team evaluation plans measure faculty and
institutional progress (e.g. systemic change in
the way interdisciplinary Earth system science is
taught within the institution, course
enrollments, career paths, outside
collaborations, etc) -
17Operating Principles Partnerships /
Sustainability (88)
- Proposed Program Adjustments
- Nearly every course initiated with ESSE
funding at 45 institutions continues to be taught
with frequent adoption as part of a departments
core curriculum -
- Challenge continued growth w/o funding for new
schools - Measures of Success
- Sustainability measured by documenting
course offerings - which continue beyond funding period and by
integrating - schools w/o funding into program
-
- Identify what partnerships have been formed, how
they interact, and what the secondary impact of
ESSE 21 support has been
18NASA Education Goals Objectives
19ESE Strategy Documents
20Earth Science Enterprise Education Program
The ESE Education Program systematically extends
NASAs results in Earth system science and the
development of remote sensing and geo-spatial
technologies to support national priorities for
STEM education and to support lifelong learning.
21ESE Education Program
The ESE Education Program participates in the
activities of international organizations
committed to global sustainable development.
Following the Summit, an international ad hoc
Group on Earth Observations (GEO) began work on a
10-year implementation plan for a comprehensive
Earth observation system
22NASA ESE Education Program
23Context NASA
NASA Earth Science Enterprise Strategy
The mission of the Earth Science Enterprise is to
understand and protect our home planet by using
our view from space to study the Earth system and
improve prediction of Earth system change.
Framework for delivering science to society
24Delivering Science to Society
25Context Earth Science Community
Geoscience Education A Recommended Strategy
enthusiastically embraces NSFs increased
emphasis on education, endorses the principle
that research and education should be well
integrated, and seeks to provide guidance for
developing a strong education program for the
geosciences.
26Earth Science Enterprise Education
- As only NASA can
- Knowledge of Earth system processes acquired
through science and technology programs provide
stimulating and challenging content in support of
STEM education. - Facilities and Tools provide hands-on
opportunities and include world-class
ground-based, airborne and in-orbit laboratories,
advanced technologies, observational data sets,
and Earth system and sub-system models. - Earth System Science Professionals, including
NASA employees and NASA-sponsored scientists,
technical and engineering experts, are role and
career models for Earth system science and
related fields.
27NASA Education Goals Objectives
- NASA Goal 6. -- Inspire and motivate students to
pursue STEM careers - ESE Education Program Contribution Inspire and
motivate students to pursue STEM careers by
providing stimulating and challenging content
using the results of Earth system science and
Earth science applications. -
NASA Objective 6.3 (Underrepresented /
Underserved) Increase the number diversity of
students, teachers, faculty researchers from
under-represented and underserved communities in
NASA related STEM fields. ESE Contribution
Inspire and support underrepresented and/or
underserved communities through each sponsored
education program.
28Approach
Embedded Activities
29Observations to Knowledge
30ESE Information Infrastructures
- ?REASoN NASA EOS Higher-Education Alliance
Mobilization of NASA EOS Data and Information
Through Web Services and Knowledge Management
Technologies for Higher-Education Teaching and
Research - NASAs Strategic Evolution of ESE Data Systems
(SEEDS) - Geospatial One Stop (http//www.geodata.gov) and
the Federal Enterprise Architecture - NSF-led planning and development activities for
cyberinfrastructure - Digital Library for Earth System Education (DLESE)
31Partnerships Alliances
- Meet customer needs leverage program impact
- Federal Agencies Alignment with national STEM
priorities - State-based Alliances Alignment with state
agendas - School districts educational Associations
Knowledgeable about curricula and standards - Business Industry Workforce Needs
- Informal Education Organizations comprehensive
missions of museums, science centers, and
community-based groups
32Solutions for ESS Education
Scalable enable benefits to audiences beyond the
initial recipientSustainable extend capacity
beyond initial funding periodSystemic lead to
lasting change in how STEM education is
approached and perceived
33Earth Science Education
Diane SchweizerProgram Scientist for Earth
Science Education(202) 358-1582diane.schweizer_at_n
asa.gov
34Outcomes
NASA Education Higher Education
Student Pipeline By 2008, attain a statistically
significant increase in the number and diversity
of NASA-supported students graduating in
NASA-related fields Faculty Competitiveness By
2008, attain a statistically significant
increase in the number of faculty in higher
education institutions involved with NASA
research and development opportunities Preservice
Education By 2008, increase by 20 the number
of higher education institutions that align their
NASA research and development activities with
STEM teacher preparation to improve STEM teacher
quality Student Research By 2008, increase by
10 the number and diversity of students
conducting NASA-relevant research
35Outcomes
NASA Education Higher Education
Student Pipeline By 2008, attain a statistically
significant increase in the number and diversity
of NASA-supported students graduating in
NASA-related fields APG Establish a
NASA-wide baseline of the number and diversity
of NASA-supported students Faculty
Competitiveness By 2008, attain a statistically
significant increase in the number of faculty in
higher education institutions involved with NASA
research and development opportunities Preservice
Education By 2008, increase by 20 the number
of higher education institutions that align their
NASA research and development activities with
STEM teacher preparation to improve STEM teacher
quality Student Research By 2008, increase by
10 the number and diversity of students
conducting NASA-relevant research