Grant lets Walsh's dream take flight

Gardner technology teacher experiences Space Camp

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"It really wasn't that bad," Lauren Walsh said of her spin inside a large gyroscope during her six-day stay at Space Camp last summer. Here, an employee of the U.S. Space and Rocket Center in Huntsville, Ala., is strapping Walsh into the machine. (Photo courtesy of Lauren Walsh)
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GARDNER – While growing up, Lauren (Miller) Walsh and her sister, Beth Miller, watched the movie "Space Camp" over and over again.

It was their favorite movie, and they used to beg their parents to send them to the camp. They even promised each other that “when we’re parents, we’ll send our kids to space camp.”

“We actually thought, at space camp, we would be launched into space,” Lauren said with a laugh. “We just wanted to be part of the whole space thing.”

Walsh’s father did buy her a telescope for Christmas one year, and the family would gather in their Coal City backyard looking at the moon and the stars. Those were good memories.

The memories were one reason learning she was accepted into Space Camp last summer was so special to Walsh. She immediately thought of her sister, who passed away 10 years ago, after contracting meningitis at her college campus.

“I thought it probably meant a little more to me,” Walsh said of receiving a Space Camp grant. “It was special.”

Although Walsh always loved space, she decided to major in elementary education in college. She taught for a year at Mazon, then for a couple of years in Wilmington before becoming Gardner Grade School’s technology director eight years ago. She also teaches technology to kindergarten through eighth graders.

Her first years at Gardner, she met a technology contractor at the school. They became friends and stayed in touch after he left.

Randy Knight would later work for Honeywell and called Walsh one day last year to tell her about a grant his company was sponsoring. Honeywell sends a certain number of teachers to Space Camp each year, and he thought Walsh should apply to go.

She found out last spring she was accepted. At 33, Walsh’s childhood dream of going to Space Camp was realized.

“I was just so happy,” she said of getting the letter of acceptance. “I thought it was a long shot since I teach technology and not science.”

She and 89 other teachers – all Honeywell scholarship recipients in the camp’s educator program – attended the educators program for six days over the summer.

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