Overtime!

10 11 2008

Great news! As of the begining of October, all tempory USSRC employees,  which enclueds Space Camp Counselors, are elligable for overtime. With over 90 hours last pay period this upcoming paycheck will definitely inclued overtime. It may not be much but it is still exciting.

on another note, since I haven’t posted lately I was planning on writing all the backlog of posts I’d planned, but there is to much to go into so here is a little update.

  • End of September had a SciVis team. SciVis stands for ‘Space Camp for Interested Visually Impaired Students’. I had a really great group of kids with varying levels of sight. THEY WERE AWESOME! If you click here (2, 3, 4,) you can find some pictures of my team and a few of me. Number four has more of me in action teaching.
  • Had several other teams since then. one Academy team (middle school age) with Indians, Americans, and one Australian. An Advanced Academy team with Indians and two British teams.
  • I’ve also had 2 pathfinder teams now. Pathfinder teams ar generaly elementry/middle school age and they are only here 3 days. The fact that I am getting these kinds of teams showes that the end of summer is here. The ammount of advanced teams has dwindled.
  • Mom and Dad came down for a visit. I had fun showing them around the Rocket Center. on sunday we drove around and visited Catherdral Caverns. Pictures to come soon.




the wait is over!

6 05 2008

At long last the month long wait to see if I was one of the few to get chosen to do Advanced Academy (our High School program) is over! I was on the phone with mom when my phone started beeping like I had another call, I ignored it cause I thought it was dad calling me back when I didn’t need my question for him answered anymore. Found out when I checked my voice mail that it was one of the managers letting me know that I got Advanced. YAY!!!!!!!!! That means that I got more training in a week and a half… cool. I am so excited. I really didn’t want to spend another whole summer with an age group I really don’t like all that much.

um… yeah, that is all I got tonight. Just had to let ppl know.





Happy Birthday to me and some other stuff I haven’t gotten around to posting…

30 04 2008

Happy Birthday to Me! I am now twenty-three! so far I’ve gotten lots of Facebook birthday greetings, a card with the usual present from Grandma, a card from my Mommy with a purple post-it note promising my gift when i come home to visit in a few weeks, and a very nice email from my Daddy with some attached songs. Also, after four months working here, our nifty space camp uniform flight jackets have finally arrived. and its to warm to wear it.

So what am I doing for my birthday? Well I got a call from Dad this morning a little before 9am my time (10am for most of my family) wishing me happy birthday. After hanging up I got back in bed only to receive a voice mail from Mom, I guess she called while I was on the phone with Dad. Funny how they were both at work and call me at about the same time. The rest of my day so far has been spent watching some PBS show about life on a Naval Carrier, funnily enough called “Carrier”. Luckily PBS has joined in the genius of CBS, NBC, ABC, and other TV networks and posts episodes of certain shows online for free, otherwise I would have missed a lot of this show. I hat having to share a TV with 30 other people.

I went out to lunch with my friend Kathy, we went to a Mexican restaurant called “Casa Blanca” for good Mexican food. Definitely beats the nachos we get every Wednesday for lunch in the cafeterias. I have to work this evening for about 4:15 to 9pm and then I think I am going out with a bunch of people. Don’t know where they are taking me or if they even know.

This past weekend was the first time I was ever scheduled for support. Support is exactly like it sounds, they are the counselors who help out when team leaders need it. They help out with sims, rocket launch, make sure all the supplies needed for rockets and other stuff are in the classrooms, make sure classrooms are clean and they got hunt down team leader when one of their kids forgot to take med and take that kid to the sickbay so the counselor doesn’t have to take the whole group there. Well, I did all of about 15 minutes of support when Hainey (one of the weekend supervisors) comes up to me and asks if I would take one of the Pathfinder teams cause someone called in sick. I said yes of course so instead of supporting I was supported. I had a pretty good team. it was the first Pathfinder I’d had in about two months and I’d almost forgotten how to build rockets and do graduation speeches. Oh, my team also won best mission patch, it was the description I know it.

I’m Scheduled for Atlantis Station all this week. Atlantis is on of our four (almost 5) orbiters that we use for missions. Station (our version of the International Space Station) is one of the places you can be during the mission, the others being the Shuttle and Mission Control. The ids in Station get to conduct experiments and flip lots of switches, and the older ones have to fix problems. On Monday and Tuesday only 2 of the 5 teams actually had people in station so I mainly hung out with Ashley in MOCR (Mission Control). And helped her when she was tiered of listening to kids with the biggest speaking part struggle over words like “Space Shuttle Main Engines.”

Well, I am sure there is more I could say but I have to be at work in an hour and kind of need to get ready. Hope to see many of you when I’m home in May!





26 01 2008

I mentioned how I have to take tests to prove I know the stff I will be teaching to campers (aka, trainees) like the Apollo missions and stuff. Well, with three out of the four tests we are allowed to bring in a 3×5 card with as much handwritten information we can fit on it front and back. This was great because while I may remember funny stories or know the basics of what happened during Apollo 13, I don’t remember all the dates and stuff, and when my brain just blanks out it is a pretty nice thing to have. Here are the pictures of the cards I used for my ‘Early Space History’ an d Shuttle/International Space Station (ISS) tests. I can barely read what I wrote myself.
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And here is a picture of me (in my uniform) sitting in the MMU (manned maneuvering unit) model in the Shuttle exhibit in the museum. Also pictured is the star finder and parachute I made.

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Thats all I have for now. I’ll post some more later. I need to go to sleep.

Most recent test scores… Shuttle/ISS=92 (counted off for stupid mistakes) Flight Deck/ACCESS= 104. One more big test left!