ED53B-3481:
Extraterrestrial Virtual Field Experience: Water at Meridiani

Friday, 19 December 2014
Chase Million1, Robert J Sullivan Jr2, Don Duggan-Haas3, Alexander G Hayes Jr2, Robert M Ross3 and Michael St. Clair1, (1)Million Concepts LLC, State College, PA, United States, (2)Cornell University, Astronomy, Ithaca, NY, United States, (3)Paleontological Research Institution, Ithaca, NY, United States
Abstract:
The Spacecraft Planetary Imaging Facility (SPIF) at Cornell University, in collaboration with Million Concepts and the Paleontological Research Institute (PRI), has developed the Extraterrestrial Virtual Field Experience (EVFE), a web-based, game-like and inquiry-driven classroom activity targeted to middle school through undergraduate introductory Earth science classrooms. Students play the role of mission scientists for a NASA rover mission, tasked with targeting the rover’s scientific instruments to investigate a specific scientific question about the landing site. As with the real mission, the student operators must optimize the efficient use of limited resources and time against the need to make observations to address working hypotheses. The activity uses only real--not artificial or simulated--mission data, and students are guided throughout by a “Mission Manager” who provides hints and advice about the scientific meaning of observations within the broader context of the mission objectives. The MER Opportunity EVFE is a pilot effort, the first of five EVFE modules planned a rate of one per year that will feature different NASA missions and scientific topics. The MER Opportunity EVFE has already been developed and focuses on the investigation of the history of water on Mars at the Meridiani landing site of the Opportunity rover. The module includes a teacher guide and is currently available to educators through the SPIF website.