Barbara Morgan

Teacher

Birthday November 28, 1951

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Fresno, California, U.S.

Age 72 years old

Nationality United States

#31943 Most Popular

1951

Barbara Radding Morgan (born November 28, 1951) is an American teacher and a former NASA astronaut.

Morgan was born to Dr. and Mrs. Jerry Radding in 1951 and raised in Fresno, California, where she attended Herbert Hoover High School.

1969

Following graduation in 1969, she was accepted to Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, where she graduated with distinction in 1973 with a B.A. in Human Biology.

1974

She obtained her teaching credential from Notre Dame de Namur University in nearby Belmont in 1974.

Morgan began her teaching career in 1974 on the Flathead Indian Reservation at Arlee Elementary School in Arlee, Montana, where she taught remedial reading and math.

1975

From 1975 to 1978, she taught remedial reading/math and second grade at McCall-Donnelly Elementary School in McCall, Idaho.

1978

From 1978 to 1979, Morgan taught English and science to third graders at Colegio Americano de Quito in Quito, Ecuador, for a year.

1979

From 1979 to 1998, Morgan taught second, third, and fourth grades at McCall-Donnelly Elementary School.

1985

Morgan was selected as the backup candidate for the NASA Teacher in Space Project on July 19, 1985.

From September 1985 to January 1986, Morgan trained with Christa McAuliffe and the Space Shuttle Challenger crew at NASA's Johnson Space Center, Houston, Texas.

Following McAuliffe's death in the Challenger disaster, Morgan assumed the duties of Teacher in Space Designee.

1986

She participated in the Teacher in Space program as backup to Christa McAuliffe for the 1986 ill-fated STS-51-L mission of the Space Shuttle Challenger.

From March 1986 to July 1986, she worked with NASA, speaking to educational organizations throughout the country.

In the fall of 1986, Morgan returned to Idaho to resume her teaching career.

She taught second and third grades at McCall-Donnelly Elementary and continued to work with NASA's Education Division, Office of Human Resources and Education.

Her duties as Teacher in Space Designee included public speaking, educational consulting, curriculum design, and serving on the National Science Foundation's Federal Task Force for Women and Minorities in Science and Engineering.

1998

In January 1998, 12 years after McAuliffe's death, Morgan was selected by NASA as an astronaut candidate (mission specialist) and reported to the Johnson Space Center in August 1998 to begin training to become a full-time astronaut.

Following the completion of two years of training and evaluation, she was assigned technical duties in the Astronaut Office Space Station Operations Branch.

She served in the Astronaut Office CAPCOM Branch, working in Mission Control as prime communicator with on-orbit crews.

2003

Like many other astronauts and cosmonauts, Morgan is a licensed amateur radio operator, having passed the technician class license exam in 2003.

This qualified her to use the facilities of the Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS) project.

During the disaster that destroyed Columbia in February 2003, she was aboard a training chase plane which was following the shuttle as it prepared to land.

2004

Morgan was initially scheduled to fly on the STS-118 mission on Space Shuttle Columbia in November 2004.

2007

She then trained as a mission specialist, and flew on STS-118 in August 2007.

She is the first teacher to have been to space.

As a result of the disaster, STS-118 was delayed until 2007 and was moved to Endeavour.

Morgan's duties as a mission specialist were no different than those of other crew members.

While NASA press releases and media briefings often referred to her as a "mission specialist educator" or "educator astronaut", Morgan did not train in the Educator Astronaut Project.

NASA Administrator Michael D. Griffin clarified at a press conference after STS-118 that Morgan was not considered a mission specialist educator, but rather was a standard mission specialist, who had been a teacher.

Prior to her flight on STS-118, NASA seemed to limit Morgan's exposure to the press, but she did a series of interviews shortly before the start of the mission about what the crew of STS-118 would be doing to help build the International Space Station, commenting, "You know, there's a great sense of pride to be able to be involved in a human endeavor that takes us all a little bit farther. When you look down and see our Earth, and you realize what we are trying to do as a human race, it's pretty profound."

Three weeks after Morgan's mission ended, she conducted her first space education assignment at Walt Disney World in Florida.

Morgan's words from that day were etched into a plaque on a wall of Mission: Space.

The "Wall of Honor" contains quotes from notable people, such as Neil Armstrong, John F. Kennedy, Charles Lindbergh, Stephen Hawking, Carl Sagan, Galileo, and Christa McAuliffe.

Morgan's plaque is placed beside McAuliffe's, which says: "Space is for everybody ... That's our new frontier out there."

This event was one of a series of lectures Morgan would complete.

STS-118, an assembly mission to the International Space Station, successfully launched from Florida's Kennedy Space Center at 6:36:42 p.m. EDT, 8 August 2007.

Morgan served as robotic arm operator and transfer coordinator, coordinating the transfer of over 5000 lb of cargo to the International Space Station, and bringing home over 3000 lb. In addition to her other duties, Morgan participated in twenty-minute amateur radio question-and-answer sessions with young people at the Discovery Center of Idaho and other centers, and joined Mission Specialist Alvin Drew in an education event with young people at the Challenger Center for Space Science Education in Alexandria, Virginia.

The event was hosted by June Scobee, widow of Space Shuttle Challenger ' s commander, Richard "Dick" Scobee.

The center honored Morgan with the President George H.W. Bush Leadership Award.

STS-118 landed successfully at Kennedy Space Center on August 21, a day ahead of schedule due to concerns about Hurricane Dean.