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Friday, May 29, 2026A Section EducationDedicated people.Excellent care.Learn more ateskenazihealth.edu/careersor call 317.880.3344.TA_Recruitment_Recorder (5.075x10.5)_4.26_P2.indd 1 4/8/26 9:51%u202fAMchloegm@indyrecorder.comBy CHLOE McGOWAN%u00a0NearSpace Education is partnering with the Indiana State Museum and several other regional institutions to host STEM programming for Hoosier middle schoolers, but they need a little help.Dream Big: STEPS to Space is a new program designed to reduce barriers to aerospace education by connecting 5th-8th-grade students in Indiana to outer space through STEM-related programming. To get the program up and running, NearSpace Education is seeking educators across the state to lead the course.%u201cWe%u2019re working with regional partners who can help us get in touch with people who might be really good at being teams all across the state,%u201d Tom Foltz, director of education and training for NearSpace Education, told the Recorder. %u201cWe want rural and urban, and we want kids from the corn fields, we want kids from Gary, we want kids from all over the place participating in this.%u201dFormed in 2020, NearSpace Education is a nonprofit organization based in Upland, Indiana, dedicated to integrating innovative space technology developed by its sister organization, NearSpace Launch, into classrooms. The organization strives to give students from pre-K through college the chance to have %u201cauthentic aerospace experiences%u201d through various programming, such as summer camps, field trips, robotics clubs, simulated satellite kits and high-altitude balloon flights, Foltz said.Phase I of Dream Big saw NearSpace Education partner with students from the University of Notre Dame, Valparaiso University, Western Michigan University, University of Toledo, Purdue University Fort Wayne and Taylor University to design and launch a half-unit satellite, Foltz said. Phase II, which is Dream Big: STEPS to Space, aims to bring a similar type of authentic spaceflight programming to middle schoolers.Two years ago, Foltz heard about an opportunity with NASA to fund outreach to informal education centers and wrote a grant for Dream Big: STEPS to Space. STEPS, which stands for scalable testing of electronics and programming by students, would see students learning to code and program Micro:Bit boards, self-contained computer boards designed to teach kids how to create technology.Each group will receive 31 of these boards, 30 of which will be programmed by each student and then loaded onto high-altitude balloons launched to near space during test flights in early spring 2027. The students will be able to collect and study data from these satellites for further research, while the remaining Micro:Bit board will be sent back to NearSpace Launch and integrated onto a satellite that will be sent into low Earth orbit in October 2027.%u201cWhatever they want to program it as %u2026 I leave it up to them, because the whole point of this is it%u2019s a scalable thing,%u201d Foltz said. %u201cWe want to see what they can do with it, and then hopefully roll it out nationwide, so that more and more people get the opportunity to build and launch these boards.%u201dThe program is designed to integrate into the regular school curriculum or in after-school clubs and science centers, Boy and Girl Scout Troops %u2014 basically anywhere a team of two educators or two can host regular meetings throughout the year, Foltz said.The goal is to reach about 900 Hoosier middle schoolers, with about five groups of 20-30 students in each region. The organization recruited five regional partners to host groups, including the Indiana State Museum in Indianapolis, Angel Mounds State Historic Site in Evansville, Science Central in Fort Wayne, STARBASE Indiana in Gary and Terre Haute Children%u2019s Museum in Terre Haute.Bethany Thomas, vice president of education and engagement for the Indiana State Museum and Historic Sites, told the Recorder that NearSpace Education shares a similar mission regarding accessibility. The museum%u2019s tried-and-true partnership with the nonprofit has included various space-themed programs over the years, including the solar eclipse in April 2024 %u2014 which Thomas said played %u201ca key role in piquing student interest.%u201d %u201cThis really allows us to reach the older audience that we still see, but not necessarily at this scale,%u201d Thomas said. %u201cIt has us doing more technology than we typically do in our program, so that was another opportunity, and being able to give a very different experience than we would be able to do on our own. %u2026 Now we have something that%u2019s going to really add value in our community, something that%u2019s longer term, and something again, pretty extraordinary.%u201dLooking back on the eclipse and with the recent success of the Artemis II mission, Thomas said there%u2019s been %u201ca resurgence of interest in aerospace.%u201d When institutions like the Indiana State Museum participate in programs like Dream Big: STEPS to Space, they help space exploration feel more real and accessible to kids by not only providing STEM education but helping to build STEM confidence and career pathways for kids.%u201cWe have a rich history of aerospace in Indiana, too,%u201d Thomas said. %u201cSo really connecting them (students) to that so that way they can see themselves as maybe future scientists, future researchers, maybe future astronauts %u2014 all these possibilities that get them great opportunities for them to learn and really understand.%u201dFoltz said access to STEM and aerospace-related education %u201cis critical%u201d these days as so much of the world hinges on STEM, from transportation to AI. %u201cYou can either understand it and use it to the best of your ability, like tools for good, or you can just get carried along with the wave and not really know what%u2019s going on,%u201d Foltz said. %u201cWe want them (the students) to get a chance to say, %u2018Oh yeah, all this technology that%u2019s around us has been designed and shaped by people, and I can do that too.%u2019 We want to just show them that they%u2019re capable of doing these things, and if we can build satellites, if we have a whole space program in tiny little Upland, Indiana out in the middle of the cornfields, why can%u2019t they do big things?%u201dNearSpace Education is still seeking middle school educators who are %u201cready to jump on board%u201d to lead programming at each regional partner location. Thanks to the grant, NearSpace Education will provide all the training, curriculum and equipment; educators need only provide the space and the students.The recruitment deadline is still fluid, as Foltz said NearSpace plans to host a major 2-day training for educators and mentors in Upland, Indiana, over the summer, with the program kicking off in early fall. Interested educators are encouraged to contact NearSpace Education directly at tomfoltz@nearspaceeducation.org or nse@nearspaceeducation.org. Educators interested in signing up for the Indiana State Museum or Angel Mounds State Historic Site can fill out the interest form at indianamuseum.org/dream-big-and-explore-space. For more information, visit nearspaceeducation.org.Contact Arts & Culture Reporter Chloe McGowan at 317-762-7848. Follow her on X @chloe_mcgowanxx.NearSpace Education looking for educators to lead state-wide STEM programming(Photo provided/Indiana State Museum)

