PAGE: Your Chance to Go to the Moon!
Tuesday 06/01/2021
4:30 pm ET
FREE 1-hour Webinar

NASA is heading for the Moon for the first time since 1972. For the first time ever, NASA is inviting you along for the ride. Educators, we are asking you to make a pledge to help us prepare the Artemis Generation for the next steps in human exploration of space.

In this webinar we'll look back at the history of human space flight and explore the current missions and their unprecedented access. We'll also discuss what's next and imagine the future into which we are sending this new generation. Join us to find out all of the details about this amazing opportunity to be a part of history.
 

 
 

Steven is a NASA STEM EPDC (Educator Professional Development Collaborative) Specialist housed in the LBJ Institute of STEM Education and Research at Texas State University in San Marcos, Texas. He currently holds a Master’s Degree in Infrastructure Planning and Management from the University of Washington, and a Bachelor’s Degree in Neuropsychology from Georgia College and State University. Steven is beginning work on his PhD in Biology in the Fall. The primary focus of his current work is in supporting Minority Serving Institutions (MSIs) in inspiring the next generation of NASA scientists from among historically disenfranchised groups. Steven helps to develop, package, and deliver STEM curriculum that translates the work and discoveries of NASA for use in the classroom and helps teachers to make it more accessible to all students. He is working with university pre-service educators, in-service, pre-service, and informal teachers to help them create culturally responsive lessons that will create engagement with students that have previously felt left out of the amazing work that NASA is doing. Steven worked in K-12 education for nearly 20 years, most recently as Life Sciences Chair at a minority serving inner city school in Georgia. He has taught Biology, Forensic Science, Anatomy and Physiology, Environmental Science, Earth and Space Science, and Physical science to special education, regular education, honors, and AP students in Georgia, Washington, and New Jersey.