July 8, 2009
 
WJU Center Expands Missions to India, Argentina, South Africa
 
Special to Huntingtonnews.net
 
Wheeling, WV (HNN) — The world has recently become a little smaller place relatively speaking with the e-Missions® distance learning program at the Challenger Learning Center® at Wheeling Jesuit University.
 
On June 20, 2009 Lori Kudlak, lead flight director for the e-Missions program, conducted the center's first e-Mission to India. Kudlak connected via videoconference in Wheeling with Westwood International School in Visakhapatnam to train 40 teachers in the Space Station Alpha mission, which is based on NASA science. The teachers will now be able to prepare their students for that mission, in which students help protect astronauts aboard the International Space Station from a large solar flare.
 
"Hats off to you to be awake at 3 a.m. and to cheer up our teachers," wrote H. Ravichhandran, who coordinated the event at the Indian school. "The teachers were thrilled on this learning, and the program could give them an insight into how an interactive classroom should be."
 
On June 26 Kudlak trained six teachers at the Taborin School in Córdoba, Argentina. They took part in Operation Montserrat, in which participants have to decide how to save the residents of the small Caribbean island of Montserrat as a volcano erupts and a hurricane approaches in this simulated emergency.
 
Later this month teachers at St. Albans College in South Africa will participate in Operation Montserrat. Then, on Sept. 28, the teachers will help their students through the same mission during an evening event for Math Week at the all-male college.
 
This summer's missions continue the Challenger Learning Center's efforts to expand its reach internationally. Earlier this year the center conducted e-Missions for children in Kyrgyzstan and Pakistan. Last year, the center flew a mission with students in Rome and repeated that mission again last month. For the last two years there have been missions for Korean educators, complete with Korean translators at the Wheeling facility. Challenger staff also have demonstrated e-Missions for educators in Northern Ireland.
 
The Challenger Learning Center is one of 47 centers worldwide established by the Challenger Center for Space Science in memory of the space shuttle Challenger. More than 40,000 students fly missions each year either at the Wheeling facility or through distance learning. The Challenger Learning Center has been honored nine years for having served the most children of all the centers. In 2008 the e-Missions program made more than 1,000 video connections to classrooms around the world.
 
The Erma Ora Byrd Center for Educational Technologies (www.cet.edu) houses cutting-edge educational technology in its 48,000-square foot facility on the campus of Wheeling Jesuit University in Wheeling. In addition to Challenger, the center is also home to the NASA-sponsored Classroom of the Future, the space agency’s principal research and development center for educational technologies.
 
The youngest of 28 Jesuit colleges and universities in the United States, Wheeling Jesuit University offers students a high-quality private education. Since 1995 U.S. News & World Report has ranked Wheeling Jesuit University among the top institutions in its “Best Master’s Universities in the South” category. The campus is also home to the Robert C. Byrd National Technology Transfer Center and the Clifford M. Lewis Appalachian Institute.
 
For complete information about WJU, please visit www.wju.edu or call 1 (800) 873-7665.



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