Science & Technology - Posted by A'ndrea Elyse Messer-Penn State on Friday, January 28, 2011 18:07 - 8 Comments
60% teachers tiptoe around evolution

Many teachers expose their students to all positions, scientific and otherwise, and let them make up their own minds. This is unfortunate, the researchers say, because "this approach tells students that well established concepts can be debated in the same way we debate personal opinions." (Credit: iStockphoto)
PENN STATE (US) — The majority of public high school biology teachers are not strong classroom advocates of evolutionary biology, new research shows.
Researchers examined data from the National Survey of High School Biology Teachers, a representative sample of 926 public high school biology instructors. They found only about 28 percent of those teachers consistently implement National Research Council recommendations calling for introduction of evidence that evolution occurred, and craft lesson plans with evolution as a unifying theme linking disparate topics in biology.
In contrast, researchers found that about 13 percent of biology teachers “explicitly advocate creationism or intelligent design by spending at least one hour of class time presenting it in a positive light.” Many of these teachers typically rejected the possibility that scientific methods can shed light on the origin of the species, and considered both evolution and creationism as belief systems that cannot be fully proven or discredited—despite 40 years of court cases that have ruled teaching creationism or intelligent design violates the Constitution
Cautious 60
Michael Berkman and Eric Plutzer, professors of political science at Penn State, dubbed the remaining teachers the “cautious 60 percent,” who are neither strong advocates for evolutionary biology nor explicit endorsers of nonscientific alternatives. “Our data show that these teachers understandably want to avoid controversy,” they said.
These teachers commonly use one or more of three strategies to avoid controversy, the study shows. Some teach evolutionary biology as if it applies only to molecular biology, ignoring an opportunity to impart a rich understanding of the diversity of species and evidence that one species gives rise to others.
Using a second strategy, some teachers rationalize the teaching of evolution by referring to high-stakes examinations.
These teachers “tell students it does not matter if they really ‘believe’ in evolution, so long as they know it for the test,” Berkman and Plutzer report in the journal Science.
Finally, many teachers expose their students to all positions, scientific and otherwise, and let them make up their own minds.
This is unfortunate, the researchers say, because “this approach tells students that well established concepts can be debated in the same way we debate personal opinions.”
“The cautious 60 percent fail to explain the nature of scientific inquiry, undermine the authority of established experts, and legitimize creationist arguments.” As a result, “they may play a far more important role in hindering scientific literacy in the United States than the smaller number of explicit creationists,” the researchers conclude.
Biology matters
More high school students take biology than any other science course, and for as many as 25 percent of high school students it is the only science course they will ever take, even though a sound science education is important in a democracy that depends on citizen input on highly technical, consequential, public policies.
Berkman and Plutzer say the nation must have better-trained biology teachers who can confidently advocate for high standards of science education in their local communities. Colleges and universities should mandate a dedicated undergraduate course in evolution for all prospective biology teachers, for example, and follow up with outreach refresher courses, so that more biology teachers embrace evolutionary biology.
“Combined with continued successes in courtrooms and the halls of state government, this approach offers our best chance of increasing the scientific literacy of future generations,” they conclude.
Berkman and Plutzer based their article on their larger work, Evolution, Creationism, and the Battle to Control America’s Classrooms, recently published by Cambridge University Press. In the book, they use the data from the high school biology teacher survey and other sources to analyze a range of factors that influence the teaching of evolution and creationism in the nation’s public schools.
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8 Comments
Karen
Glad the outright creationists are only 13% – that’s not surprising. Just appalled that people who call themselves ‘science teachers’ either don’t know how to teach it correctly or are afraid to.
philosopherkingtomas
just wait till the republicans or even worse palin take over!
J Hayes
And you wonder why the news last week said only 1-2% of American students were capable of being scientists or engineers….
Bill Bugbee
From the dumbing down of American students by teachers running away from science to protect their jobs, to revisionist historians and global warming deniers running amok in the media, or ideologues running school boards and departments of education (especially in Texas) — together it paints a poor picture for science, and does not bode well for America and its ability as a society to make intelligent national policy decisions or compete in a global marketplace.
Robert Reed
Bill….50% of the people out there are below average intelligence. This is a fact nobody can avoid.
Some of them are teachers. Public schools are a good thing overall, and….
Parents still need to teach their children how to view the World they live in. Be it with jaundiced or rose colored eyes or clearly. Please, everybody – teach a young person something you know, today.
The majority of creationists I have talked with have no idea where they got the idea of creation. Some thought it was from parents, or preachers, or teachers or just from friends but nobody was sure. After I asked that question very few of them were willing to discuss the idea. To find out your ideas are based on such a soft foundation is disturbing. Few of them thought creationism is a religious concept. This is even more disturbing.
CHARLES DARWIN
what you, i or the teacher thinks is Not relevant..
Evolutuion must be based on EVIDENCE.
EVIDENCE
EVIDENCE
EVIDENCE
EVIDENCE will prove charles darwin as
true / false
yes / no
real / fake
real / hoax
























Students instinctively want to know the purpose of or for evolution. Creationists have an answer but it’s the wrong answer. Evolutionary biologists’ answer is that it has no purpose. Which is also wrong because they aren’t allowed to speculate philosophically that it may serve a multitude of purposes. Blame the neoDarwinists for this – they don’t allow the teaching of the theories that propose the more direct relationships between experience and evolution than experiencing the random acts of nature.