• → European Space Agency

      • Space for Europe
      • Space News
      • Space in Images
      • Space in Videos
    • About Us

      • Welcome to ESA
      • DG's News and Views
      • For Member State Delegations
      • Business with ESA
      • ESA Exhibitions
      • ESA Publications
      • Careers at ESA
    • Our Activities

      • Space News
      • Observing the Earth
      • Human Spaceflight
      • Launchers
      • Navigation
      • Space Science
      • Space Engineering
      • Operations
      • Technology
      • Telecommunications & Integrated Applications
    • For Public

    • For Media

    • For Educators

    • For Kids

    • ESA

    • Human Spaceflight

    • Astronauts

    • International Space Station

    • Research

    • Education

    • About Education
    • What we do & why we do it
    • @ESAHSOeducation
    • Browse lessons by

      • Age range

        • Primary level

          • Columbus: Past, present and future…
          • The Eclipse that saved Columbus
          • The Automated Transfer Vehicle
          • ATV: a very special delivery
          • Life in Space
          • A drop of water
          • Primary level ISS Education Kit - downloads
          • PromISSe educational experiments
          • Greenhouse in space
        • Secondary level

          • Ingredients for Life: On Earth and in Space
          • Spaceship Earth
          • ATV: a very special delivery - Lesson notes
          • Bubbles in space
          • Lesson plan for use with the ISS Education Kit on the web
          • A space compass
          • Bugs in Space
          • Space (fluid) oddities
          • Science fiction - science fact
          • Searching for the Missing Universe
          • Feeding our future – nutrition on Earth and in space
          • Newton in space
          • Body space
          • Space matters
          • Space robotics
          • ISS 3-D Teaching Tool: Spaceflight Challenge I
          • Take your classroom into space
          • ISS Education Kit - downloads
          • Do objects have weight in space?
          • Exploring capillarity
          • Greenhouse in space
        • University level

          • SpaceMaster
          • Life in Space
          • EuMAS
      • Mission

        • Astrolab

          • A space compass
          • Space robotics
        • OasISS

          • Life in Space
          • A drop of water
          • Bubbles in space
          • Take your classroom into space
          • Do objects have weight in space?
          • Exploring capillarity
        • PromISSe

          • Radiation
          • Balance in space
          • Immunology
          • Ingredients for Life: On Earth and in Space
          • PromISSe educational experiments
        • Eneide

          • ISS DVD Lesson series
        • Delta

          • Body space
        • Columbus

          • Columbus: Past, present and future…
          • The Eclipse that saved Columbus
          • Bugs in Space
          • Space (fluid) oddities
        • Cervantes

          • Newton in space
        • MagISStra

          • Greenhouse in space
      • Subject

        • Physics

          • Radiation
          • Bubbles in space
          • Lesson plan for use with the ISS Education Kit on the web
          • A space compass
          • Science fiction - science fact
          • Searching for the Missing Universe
          • Newton in space
          • Space matters
          • Space robotics
          • Take your classroom into space
          • Do objects have weight in space?
          • Exploring capillarity
          • PromISSe educational experiments
        • History

          • Columbus: Past, present and future…
          • The Eclipse that saved Columbus
        • Earth sciences

          • What is radiation?
        • Chemistry

          • Foam
        • Biology

          • Balance in space
          • Body space
          • Bugs in Space
          • Greenhouse in space
          • Immunology
          • Ingredients for Life: On Earth and in Space
          • Feeding our future – nutrition on Earth and in space
          • ISS 3-D Teaching Tool: Spaceflight Challenge I
          • ISS education kit
    • ISS Education Fund

      • What is the ISSEF?
      • Funding participants
      • Honorary participants
      • What does the ISSEF do?
      • ISSEF funding
      • Who can participate?
      • Benefits of participation
      • Application form
    • Services
    • Subscribe
    • RSS feeds

    ESA > Our Activities > Human Spaceflight > Education

    Take your classroom into space

    14 February 2008

    With Europe's Columbus laboratory safely attached to the International Space Station, this is a good time to come up with new ideas for experiments that can be carried out onboard the station to demonstrate the effects of weightlessness to young students.

    The International Space Station (ISS), the largest international space project of all time, orbits the Earth at an altitude of 400 km where the effects of the Earth’s gravitational field are effectively removed. This provides a unique location in which to carry out experiments in a weightless environment.

    ESA invites European educators to come up with ideas that use this unique aspect of the ISS to illustrate to students the effects of weightlessness. Participation is open to primary and secondary school teachers, and to educators such as those involved in science education at a museum, a teacher training college or an educational organisation.

    Call for Education Ideas

    ISS configuration 5 November 2007
    The International Space Station

    Proposals should be written in English and describe a scientific demonstration that behaves differently in the weightless environment of the ISS than on Earth. Entries should clearly identify the objectives, the expected results and the materials required to carry out the experiment, and should be designed for either primary or secondary level students.

    To participate in the Call for Education Ideas entries should be submitted in English using the downloadable application form (linked on the right) and arrive at ESA by 30 May 2008. ESA regrets that entries can only be accepted from participants who are a national of one or more ESA Member State, i.e. Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom.


    Prize for best proposals

    A team of ESA experts will select the 20 best proposals and the top ten entries will be announced on this website on 16 June 2008. Each of the ten will receive €500, a package of ESA education material and a kit to make a scale model of the ISS. In recognition of their effort, the ten runners up will also be sent a scale model ISS kit.

    Selection criteria

    Pedro Duque
    Pedro Duque demonstrates Newtons' laws

    In July work will commence on preparing some of the best experiments for flight to the ISS where an ESA astronaut will carry out the experiments. Students across Europe will be given a unique opportunity to witness the 'classroom in space', and hopefully to perform simultaneously the experiment in their own classroom.

    Proposals will be assessed using the following criteria:

    • relevance to weightlessness: the experiment should be a powerful illustration of the nature or effect of weightlessness

    • relevance to the curriculum: the topic should be relevant to the school curriculum

    • interdisciplinary: topics that relate to more than one discipline will be an asset

    • originality: proposals should show an original and novel approach to teaching

    • technical implementation: delivery to the ISS imposes limitations on mass and weight (no more than 2 kg) and it must be technically possible to carry out the experiment onboard the ISS

    In addition, preference will be given to experiments that can be performed both onboard the ISS and in the classroom, as this is a very successful way to illustrate the effect of weightlessness. More ideas on the type of proposal ESA is looking for can be found in the links to previous educational experiments carried out with ESA’s contribution onboard the ISS (see related articles on the right).

    For further information on this Call for Education Ideas please contact: isseducationteam @ esa.int

    Rate this

    Views

    Share

    • Currently 0 out of 5 Stars.
    • 1
    • 2
    • 3
    • 4
    • 5
    Rating: 0/5 (0 votes cast)

    Thank you for rating!

    You have already rated this page, you can only rate it once!

    Your rating has been changed, thanks for rating!

    37
    Tweet
    • Related articles
    • Seeds in space
    • Oil emulsion
    • Related links
    • Human Spaceflight Education
    • ESA Education
    • International Space Station
    • Downloads
    • Downloadable application form

    Connect with us

    • RSS
    • Youtube
    • Twitter
    • Flickr
    • G+
    • Facebook
    • Livestream
    • Subscribe
    • App Store
    • LATEST ARTICLES
    • · Watching for hazards: ESA opens as…
    • · ESA astronaut Timothy Peake set fo…
    • · Space drives e-mobility
    • · Proba-V opens its eyes
    • · First new Galileo satellite arrive…
    • FAQ

    • Jobs at ESA

    • Site Map

    • Contacts

    • Terms and conditions