The recent airing of the Hallmark Hall of Fame movie A Smile as Big as the Moon created such
a surge of interest in attending Space Camp that the camp’s website was unable
to handle the flood of traffic. The site crashed last night, but it is now back
up and running as a resource for parents and kids with special needs who are
looking into the program, many for the first time.
What a lot of families did not realize before is that the
U.S. Space and Rocket Center in Huntsville, AL, offers specialty programs for
students with special needs, such as visual and hearing impairment. These
programs include the same features as the typical Space Camp programs, but
participants will also benefit from a presentation from blind and/or deaf NASA
professional about working in the space industry and all the latest technology
like tactile Braille displays and synthetic speech for computers.
Space Camp has worked closely for years with many different
organizations such as the Alabama Institute for the Deaf and the Blind to make
this an inspirational and significant experience for all students. Two weeks
before the students arrive for the Space Camp for Visually Impaired Students
(SCI-VIS), the Space and Rocket Center technicians replace consoles in the
shuttle simulators with Braille panels. Students will have access to large
print text or closed circuit televisions with the text on them if that is what
they need. SCI-VIS is a week-long program that includes classes, mission
simulations, and even diving in the neutral buoyancy tank, which simulates the
experience of making repairs on the Space Station in zero gravity.
While the students enjoy the exciting things Space Camp has
to offer, they also appreciate the opportunity to be around similar kids from
all over the country and around the world.
For more information about the Space Camp Special Programs,
visit their website.