![]()
|
![]() WHY Your Knowledge Is Needed |
||||||
|
The Challenge Facing NASA (and You)
Notwithstanding the special status assigned the space program in this piece, NASA faces precisely the same challenge when it comes to articulating the importance of its science missions to everyday life. Indeed, to many everyday people NASA itself is the ethereal domain of highly-trained professionals with "the right stuff." This gut-level conclusion is a forty-year-old relic of the last time the Space Program captured the attention of the entire world at a deeply personal level. Today's reality is that people feel disconnected from what NASA science does, due in part to "an inability to get its message across to the public." Ironically, this "right stuff" conclusion is simply not true. NASA, like any other successful enterprise, is made up of ordinary people doing extraordinary things. True, NASA is rocket scientists and astronauts . . . and so much more. A closer look reveals that it is a rich microcosm of American society. Yes, it has scientists and engineers, but it also has business managers, food service workers, lawyers, electricians, accountants, secretaries, police officers, etc. - each with an important role, each with a community of "colleagues" outside the Agency, and each with stories to tell that potentially can bring NASA back to Earth. NMB '02 is your chance to help NASA tell its story to everyday people in new and more effective ways by applying your knowledge of the business world and its tools of advertising, marketing, communication and journalism. The Topic To Be Illucidated in NMB '02 At a press conference held at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory on October 26, 2000, NASA announced its 20-year Mars Exploration Program. Detailed at the conference were a series of robotic science missions the Agency plans to launch to that planet in that time period. Calling it "part of a scientific tapestry that will weave a tale of new understanding of Earth's sometimes enigmatic and surprising neighbor," these missions offer "greater rewards [than past missions, including] long-distance surface mobility, improved imaging, subsurface exploration, and even life-detection technologies." This statement, assembled from the press release and subsequent JPL web site (http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/missions/), is your starting point. For a start regarding the issues involved in the public understanding of science, we recommend you first:
|
|||||||
|
WHY |
WHO |
WHEN & WHERE |
HOW & BY WHEN |
PROGRAM AMENDMENTS |
FOR MORE INFORMATION |
HOME NASA Means Business Student Competition 2002 is sponsored by NASA and is administered by Texas Space Grant Consortium. |
|||||||
![]() Last Modified: Mon Sept 10, 2001 CSR/TSGC TeamWeb |
|||||||