STEM students take on NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

Hill-Lopes Scholars Program offers students experiential learning opportunities through site visits with major STEM organizations

By GRACE HOGGARTH '22 on April 2, 2024

快活视频students stand in one of NASA Goddard's facilities
Photo by NASA/GSFC/Tabatha Luskey

It鈥檚 not often students can say they鈥檝e had a peek behind the curtain of operations at a major space flight center. For students in the Hill-Lopes Scholars program, their visit to NASA Goddard Space Flight Center was an unforgettable and empowering experience.

Students watched NASA employees test parts of the , took part in a panel discussion with women employees with backgrounds in environmental science, engineering and earth science education, and toured the campus and testing facilities.

The New Space Telescope: A Women-Led Project

A focal point of the tour included the workings of the space telescope鈥攖hat answered questions about the expansion of the universe, dark energy, exoplanets and more鈥攚hich is set to launch by May 2027.

Students were in awe to learn the space telescope project is primarily women led, with women at the helm of jet propulsion engineering, electronic engineering and outreach.

During the panel discussion, Trena Ferrell, Ph.D., earth science education and public outreach lead, and Julie Hoover, senior communications & STEM engagement specialist, Joint Polar Satellite System, shared their experiences working at NASA and offered insight into career and internship resources.

快活视频students observe engineers working on the Nancy Grace Roman Telescope
Students observe NASA engineers in action as they work on the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope. Photo by NASA/GSFC/Tabatha Luskey

Student Learning Beyond the Classroom

For Britney Whittington 鈥24, this visit was a dream come true. A computer science major with a minor in astronomy, she aspires to work with organizations like NASA as a telescope engineer.

Whittington began at 快活视频during the pandemic, and her studies were all virtual. Still, the Hill-Lopes Scholars program helped her bridge personal gaps, build professional and networking skills and feel like part of a community.

This support led Whittington to partner with 快活视频professors Jennifer Scott, Ph.D., and Dylan Hilligoss, Ph.D., to reinstitute and program TU鈥檚 telescope and pursue internships and career field application opportunities like the Astro Scholars program at the at Johns Hopkins University鈥 where she will be returning for an internship in telescope programming this summer.

鈥 Being in such a male-dominated field can be a little intimidating and tough, but knowing there is a community of other women in STEM going through similar experiences and learning about all these skills with the Hill-Lopes community has been wonderful. I don鈥檛 know where I would be without it. 鈥

Britney Whittington, Hill-Lopes Scholar, 鈥24

快活视频Collaboration Led to NASA Visit 

Hill-Lopes Scholars program coordinator Kristin Pinkowski believes it was an ideal time for students to visit the space flight center. 鈥淲e have students who are really interested in pursuing NASA, space telescope work and astronomy. NASA hires geologists, computer scientists and more, and we want to highlight those careers and demonstrate how rich this area is with employers. I鈥檓 glad the students are finally getting this opportunity.鈥

This site visit was a collaboration with the 快活视频Career Center and assistant director of STEM career education Tanja Swain. Through this partnership, the site visit was open to all 快活视频students鈥攕omething Swain finds valuable for furthering career education across campus.

鈥淐ollaborating with the Hill-Lopes Scholars program has been so helpful because the Hill-Lopes scholars are leaders on campus and share these opportunities with other students. We can host more visits like this and get better student engagement and participation,鈥 says Swain.

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