2025-26 Competition Season Registration Opens September 1, 2025
Ignited by the observation of the lack of diverse participants in the model rocketry hobby and aerospace industry, mother-daughter team Robin and Charis Houston created an avenue to increase participation among youth who are traditionally underserved and underrepresented in STEM programs and model rocketry. As a result, the FIRE Rocket Challenge launched in Fall 2021 with a group of fifteen fifth through twelfth-grade students in the Maryland, DC, and Virginia metropolitan area!
After a week's session at Space Camp in Huntsville, Alabama, Robin and Charis's trajectory to rocketry/STEM educators began in 2015. Charis returned home enthusiastic, having learned that she could combine her love for all things space with her desire to be an engineer. But, "Houston, we have a problem!" Robin was a little less enthusiastic because she realized she would have to research opportunities in their community to help foster Charis's new interests. After several weeks of searching for accessible programs in the area, friends and fellow parents of a "STEM kid" directed Robin to FIRE STEM in Greenbelt, MD. FIRE STEM is a STEM education organization managed by a group of diverse aerospace engineers working at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. One of the programs FIRE offered was an opportunity to participate in the national TARC (The American Rocketry Challenge) competition. Charis signed up, and within a couple of months, she was building model rockets to meet specific design challenges. Her TARC mentor gave her a flyer advertising NARCON, the annual conference for the National Association of Rocketry (NAR), which became the second stage booster of her rocketry journey.
During the weekend of NARCON 2017 workshops and networking, Charis met two NAR members who encouraged her to try out for the junior national team. Six months later, she entered the competition to qualify for the national team and was selected to join the team that would represent the United States at the world championships in Poland that summer. Of all of the juniors from twenty-four countries around the world on the launch field in Poland, Charis and a teammate who was also a FIRE STEM student were the only two brown-skinned children participating. On the plane ride home, Robin and Charis discussed how they might encourage other diverse juniors to take advantage of the rich experiences she enjoyed as a member of the model rocketry community.
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Charis graduated with a B.S. in Astronautical Engineering and is an Engineer in Mission Operations.
Robin serves as the executive director, coach, and mentor of Fire Rockets, the deputy team manager for the US Junior Space Modeling Team, and supports aerospace-themed K-12 STEM education through collaborations with NSBE Aerospace SIG, AIAA National Capitol Section, Estes Education, and Capital Technology University.