Trinity High School junior Layo Obamehinti is one of 350 Texas students who will travel to NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston this summer to help design a mock mission to Mars.
Obamehinti, an International Baccalaureate student, has interests spanning from aerospace, to sports, music, literature, and journalism.
“I wanted to learn more about what the different types of engineering that are involved with aerospace technology,” she said in a prepared statement. “I hope to learn more about what it takes to create missions to space. I want to challenge my critical thinking skills.”
The High School Aerospace Scholars have been working throughout the school year, completing 10 Web-based assignments that lead up to the internship from June 15 to 20.
Why does NASA do it? One reason is to drum up interest in science, technology, engineering, math. By doing that, NASA hopes to find students who will go on to plan real missions for going back to the moon, and to Mars, and beyond, officials said.
More information is available at http://aerospacescholars.jsc.nasa.gov/HAS/index.cfm
--Terry Webster