Annual Rocket Launch Challenge seeks student participants.

Press Release Summary:



Registration for 2011 Team America Rocketry Challenge is open through November 30 for up to 750 student teams in grades 7-12 from any US school, home school, or non-profit youth organization. As catalyst for generating student interest in math and science, annual rocket contest challenges teams of 3-10 students to design and build one rocket that will climb to 750 ft with raw egg payload and stay aloft for 40-45 sec and return to Earth with egg intact.



Original Press Release:



Student Rocketeers Wanted for World's Largest Amateur Launch



Team America Rocketry Challenge Registration Opens

Arlington, Va. - Registration for the 2011 edition of the world's largest rocket competition is open now through November 30. The Team America Rocketry Challenge will accept up to 750 student teams in grades 7-12 from any U.S. school, home school or non-profit youth organization.

The annual rocket contest, sponsored by the Aerospace Industries Association, challenges teams of three to 10 students to design and build a rocket that will climb to 750 feet with a raw egg payload and stay aloft for 40 to 45 seconds. The egg must then return to earth unbroken. The 2011 contest rules and registration information are available at www.rocketcontest.org.

"The Team America Rocketry Challenge is a vital part of our industry's outreach to young people," said Marion C. Blakey, AIA president and CEO. "TARC provides a great opportunity for students to work with scientists and engineers and learn in an exciting and fun environment."

The top 100 TARC team finalists will be notified April 8 that they have earned a spot in the May 14 competition just outside of Washington, DC. Student participants compete for $60,000 in prizes, scholarships and a trip to the 2011 international air show in Paris for an international "Fly-Off" with student teams from France and the UK.

AIA sponsors TARC with the National Association of Rocketry, NASA, the Defense Department, the American Association of Physics Teachers and AIA member companies. The contest is in its ninth year and is proving to be a catalyst for generating student interest in math and science.

The aerospace industry is actively looking for young people to join its ranks. The industry is facing a future workforce shortage as many employees will reach retirement age in the next decade. A recent Aviation Week and Space Technology survey found that almost 40 percent of the workforce is over the age of 50. For more information on careers in aerospace, visit www.LaunchIntoAerospace.org.

AIA

Founded in 1919 shortly after the birth of flight, the Aerospace Industries Association is the most authoritative and influential trade association representing the nation's leading manufacturers and suppliers of civil, military and business aircraft, helicopters, unmanned aircraft systems, space systems, aircraft engines, homeland and cybersecurity systems, materiel and related components, equipment services and information technology.

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