Students preparing for Team America Rocketry Challenge.

Press Release Summary:



Students on 669 teams from 45 states, District of Columbia, and U.S. Virgin Islands are preparing to launch their hand-designed rockets at the eighth annual Team America Rocketry challenge, which is designed to boost industry workforce by sparking interest in science, math, and engineering education. This year's challenge is for each team to design and build model rocket that carries 1 raw egg payload to altitude of 825 ft with flight duration of 40-45 sec, returning egg to ground unbroken.



Original Press Release:



669 Teams of Student Rocketeers Launching for Team America Rocketry Challenge Finals



Arlington, Va. - Students on 669 teams from 45 states, the District of Columbia and the U.S. Virgin Islands are preparing to launch their hand-designed rockets in the world's largest rocket contest¯ the eighth annual Team America Rocketry Challenge (www.rocketcontest.org).

Sponsored by the Aerospace Industries Association, the National Association of Rocketry and more than 30 industry partners, with participation by NASA, the Defense Department and the American Association of Physics Teachers, the contest is designed to boost the industry workforce by sparking interest in science, math and engineering education among middle and high school students.

The aerospace industry faces a workforce challenge as more than 20 percent of the industry becomes eligible to retire by 2013. Not enough students are entering aerospace engineering programs, potentially leaving thousands of critical defense and other sector positions unfilled as professionals retire.

This year's challenge is for each 3- to 10-member team to design and build a model rocket that carries a single raw egg payload to a precise altitude of 825 feet with a flight duration of between 40 and 45 seconds, returning the egg to the ground unbroken. The 100 teams with the best qualifying scores submitted by April 5 compete at the finals at Great Meadow in The Plains, Va., (near Washington, D.C.) on May 15.

In a 2009 survey among team members, 70 percent said they became more interested in a STEM career as a result of TARC. For example, contest alumnus Lieutenant (j.g.) Jerry Maniscalco graduated from the Naval Academy with an aerospace engineering degree in 2007, and is now piloting Seahawk helicopters in Jacksonville, Fla.

"Each student has a critical role in designing their team's rocket and they learn to appreciate how engineering is both exciting and mentally challenging," said Maniscalco. "TARC is exactly what set me on the educational path to become an aerospace engineer."

The total purse for the contest is $60,000 in scholarships and prizes. Raytheon Company pays for the winning team to attend a "fly-off" at the Farnborough International Air Show near London in July against teams from the UK and France.

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