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Growing Beyond Earth: Student Citizen Science Contributing to Space Crop ProductionFairchild Tropical Botanic Garden and NASA have been partnering since 2015 to conduct a citizen science education program for middle and high school students called Growing Beyond Earth (GBE). Growing Beyond Earth is a multi-classroom science project designed to advance NASA’s research on growing plants in space.

GBE was implemented locally and scaled nationally under two NASA Grants. Now serving more than 250 schools and over 10,000 middle and high school students nationwide, GBE successfully improved STEM education. It also contributed student-generated data to NASA, improving NASA research on the ground and on ISS, with two student-selected crops grown in space.

GBE is unique in its focus on real scientific research, enabling student “citizen scientists” to contribute data toward NASA mission planning. Each classroom receives a Fairchild-designed plant habitat analogous to the plant growing equipment aboard the International Space Station (ISS). Fairchild and NASA scientists train teachers to conduct in-classroom GBE experiments, and students then share experimental data online with NASA.

As NASA looks toward a long-term human presence beyond Earth’s orbit, there are specific science, technology, engineering, and math challenges related to food production in space. During this presentation, learn how GBE is addressing those challenges by expanding the diversity and quality of edible plants that can be grown aboard spacecraft. We will share the significant scientific and educational results that have come out of this partnership and explain how we quickly pivoted to allow students to continue to contribute during the COVID-era. Finally, we will explain how on Earth, GBE is also advancing technologies for growing plants in urban, indoor, and other resource-limited settings through the GBE Maker challenge for High School, University, and Professional communities of Makers across the country to develop the next generation of space crop production technologies. These programs are supported by NASA.
Document ID
20210016744
Acquisition Source
Kennedy Space Center
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
Amy Padolf
(Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden Miami, Florida, United States)
Gioia Donna Massa
(Kennedy Space Center Merritt Island, Florida, United States)
Marion Litzinger
(Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden Miami, Florida, United States)
Jacob J Torres
(Aecom (United States) Los Angeles, California, United States)
Date Acquired
June 1, 2021
Subject Category
Life Sciences (General)
Meeting Information
Meeting: American Society for Gravitational and Space Research Annual Meeting
Location: Baltimore, MD
Country: US
Start Date: November 3, 2021
End Date: November 6, 2021
Sponsors: National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 719125.01.02.08.01
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Use by or on behalf of the US Gov. Permitted.
Technical Review
NASA Technical Management
Keywords
Growing Beyond Earth
Space Crop Production
ISS

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