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National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center
Houston, Texas 77058
- NAME: Joan E. Higginbotham
- NASA Astronaut Candidate (Mission Specialist)
- PERSONAL DATA:
- Born August 3, 1964 in Chicago, Illinois. She enjoys body building
(weightlifting), cycling, music, motivational speaking.
- EDUCATION:
- Graduated from Whitney M. Young Magnet High School, Chicago,
Illinois, in 1982; received a bachelor of science degree electrical engineering from
Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, in 1987, and masters of management and space
systems from Florida Institute of Technology in 1992 and 1996, respectively.
- ORGANIZATIONS:
- Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., Bronze Eagles.
- AWARDS:
- NASA Exceptional Service Medal; Keys to the Cities of Cocoa and
Rockledge, Florida; Group Achievement Award for STS-26 Return to Flight; Kennedy Space
Center Public Affairs Certificate of Appreciation for Service; Commendation of Merit for
Service to the Department of Defense (DOD) Missions; Presidential Sports Award in
bicycling and weight training; Outstanding Woman of the Year Award, Outstanding
Performance 1992, 1993, 1995.
- NASA EXPERIENCE:
- Joan Higginbotham began her career in 1987 at the Kennedy Space
Center (KSC), Florida, as a Payload Electrical Engineer in the Electrical and
Telecommunications Systems Division. Within six months she became the lead for the Orbiter
Experiments (OEX) on OV-102, the Space Shuttle Columbia. Later she worked on the Shuttle
payload bay reconfiguration for all Shuttle missions. She was also tasked by KSC
management to undertake several special assignments where she served as the Executive
Staff Assistant to the Director of Shuttle Operations and Management, led a team of
engineers in performing critical analysis for the Space Shuttle flow in support of a
simulation model tool, and was involved working on an interactive display to show detailed
Shuttle processing procedures at Spaceport USA. Higginbotham was promoted to Lead Orbiter
Project Engineer for OV-102 after two years as an orbiter project engineer for OV-104,
Space Shuttle Atlantis. She held the technical lead government engineering position in the
firing room where she supported and managed the integration of vehicle testing and
troubleshooting.
Selected as an astronaut candidate by
NASA in April 1996 Joan Higginbotham reported to the Johnson Space Center in August 1996
to begin two years of training and evaluation. Successful completion of initial training
will qualify her for various technical assignments leading to selection as a mission
specialist on a Space Shuttle flight crew.
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