From News-Times: Former Columbia County educator starts space program
A former Columbia County educator wants to take his love for the NASA space program to new heights.
Though NASA’s space shuttle program officially ended in August 2011,
Evans resident Henry Quinn wants area residents to remember the
importance of space exploration. He will help them do so through the
creation of a program he calls Space Experience Presentations.
“I would like to inspire,” Quinn said. “I would like to educate and
I’d like to inform people about the past, present and future of the
space program.”
In addition, Quinn is working on five other programs, with topics
that include how space technology is used in everyday life, the history
of the space shuttle and religious ties to the program.
Quinn formerly served as a teacher and assistant principal at Evans
and Greenbrier high schools. After 31 years as an educator, he retired
from the Warren County school system in 2009.
As a teacher, Quinn said he would incorporate aspects of the space
program into his social science lesson plans at every opportunity. With
the help of NASA, he even was able to organize “space week” at Warren
County schools.
“Lecturing is good for awhile, but I found it much more effective to
be more of a storyteller,” he said. “That’s an emphasis I want to use
with this program.”
Quinn expects to tailor his interactive presentations to each group
with whom he speaks. He said he’ll reach out to any organization,
including businesses, schools and colleges, planetariums and churches.
Quinn is offering the presentations at no cost but said donations would be accepted.
Space memorabilia such as shuttle models, pictures autographed by
astronauts and photos of shuttle launches fill Quinn’s study – a motif
his wife, Joy, also a retired educator, agreed to.
Married for 34 years, the two seem to be a match made in the stars.
Five years before the couple met, Joy Quinn did a ninth-grade school
project on Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon.
A childhood friend of hers also ended up marrying the associate
director of the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, allowing them the
chance to watch a couple of shuttle launches.
“I would make the comment with him that he married me because of who my friend was,” she joked.
Through his new program, which will be ready for group presentations
in August, Quinn also wants to stress what the future holds for the
space program.
“We need to be proud of what we’ve done because there’s competition coming,” he said.
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