Why Sally Ride’s Space Odyssey Was Only the Beginning
http://www.takepart.com/article/2015/03/26/why-sally-ride-space-odyssey-was-only-beginning?cmpid=tpdaily-eml-2015-03-26
Sally Ride might be best known for being the first American woman in space, but her work on Earth might be her most enduring legacy.
Ride, who died in 2012, made history when she blasted into orbit on the Challenger spacecraft in 1983. Her job on board was to control a mechanical arm to send satellites into space. Back on Earth, she embraced her newfound identity as national role model. Setting a positive example would become her lifelong missionone that is carried on by the Sally Ride Science foundation, which develops STEM curricula and other initiatives to get students thinking about space.
I never went into physics or the astronaut corps to become a role model. But after my first flight, it became clear to me that I was one. And I began to understand the importance of that to people. Young girls need to see role models in whatever careers they may choose
. You cant be what you cant see, Ride said a few weeks before she died.
After leaving NASA in 1987, she taught at Stanford University for a couple of years, then at the University of San Diego. In addition to teaching, she sought to help young people everywhere to dream space dreams, writing seven childrens books (several of which she cowrote with her partner, Tam OShaughnessy).
In 1995, Ride started a program that aimed to connect children to the wonders of space through photography. The Sally Ride EarthKAM allows middle school students around the world to harness the power of a camera aboard the International Space Station, snapping students choice of images around the globe. The Sally Ride EarthKAM is a permanent payload on the station, used on about four missions a year.