Our Science students are preparing to become space biologists and embark on a voyage of discovery by growing seeds that have been into space.
In September, 2kg of rocket seeds were flown to the International Space Station (ISS) on Soyuz 44S where they will spend several months in microgravity before returning to Earth in March 2016. The seeds have been sent as part of Rocket Science, an educational project launched by the RHS Campaign for School Gardening and the UK Space Agency.
Our Academy will be one of up to 10,000 schools to receive a packet of 100 seeds from space, which they will grow alongside seeds that haven’t been to space and measure the differences over seven weeks. The students won’t know which seed packet contains which seeds until all results have been collected by the RHS Campaign for School Gardening and analysed by professional biostatisticians.
Science Faculty Lead, Mrs Bilton said:
“We are delighted to be taking part in the Rocket Science project. It will be an exciting way for our young scientists to contribute to a national experiment”
“The project encouraged children of all ages to take part and as we are an all-through academy from ages 2-16, it allows our entire school community to be involved”
“Hopefully we will be able to prove whether Matt Damon would have actually been able to grow crops and survive on Mars, as portrayed in the recent Ridley Scott film The Martian”
The out-of-this-world, nationwide science experiment will enable the students to think more about how we could preserve human life on another planet in the future, what astronauts need to survive long-term missions in space and the difficulties surrounding growing fresh food in challenging climates.
Rocket Science is just one educational project from a programme developed by the UK Space Agency to celebrate British ESA astronaut Tim Peake’s Principia mission to the ISS and inspire young people to look into careers in STEM (science, technology, engineering and maths) subjects, including horticulture.
Follow the project on our Twitter: @UnityBlackpool #RocketScience
RHS Campaign for School Gardening: @RHSSchools #RocketScience