In a sane world, the ringing denunciation of intelligent design and
creationist "science" delivered by a federal judge in 2005 would have
eradicated these concepts from the schoolroom.
District Judge John E. Jones III of Harrisburg, Pa., ruled then that "intelligent design" is not science,
"cannot uncouple itself from its creationist, and thus religious,
antecedents," and therefore is unconstitutional as a subject to be
taught in a public school.
Yet the creationists keep at it. A recent report, written for Slate.com by the indefatigable and implausibly youthful Zack Kopplin, involves a network of charter schools with an enrollment of 17,000 students in Texas, Arkansas, and Indiana and an incredible haul of $82.6 million a year in state, local and federal funds.
As Kopplin reports, the biology workbook assigned
to students in the schools operated by Responsive Education Solutions
is shot through with creationist propaganda. Among its assertions:
"Evolution — which is, after all, an unproved theory — has been treated
as fact. It has reached the level of dogma, widely accepted, but
unproven and changing school of thought that is treated as though it
were fact."
Its section on "The Origin of Life" asserts: "There are only two ways
that life could have begun: "1 - Spontaneous generation - random
chemical processes formed the first cell. 2 - Supernatural intervention
created the first cell."
As for the first living cell, the text blithers on, scientists "can only hypothesize
what it might have been like." Thus it craftily attempts to undermine
the scientific method. On the other hand, it says, "for many,
supernatural creation (either by God or some other supernatural power)
of the first cell is a more plausible explanation."
One way to react to a school system that places "supernatural
intervention" on the same scientific plane as a natural process, however
dopily described, is with relief that these 17,000 children won't be
equipped to compete in the real world with our kids. Life in
modern America is hard enough, so there's something Darwinian indeed
about saddling all those kids with the burden of a 16th-century
education.
Another way is to express dismay that taxpayer funds, including money
paid by federal taxpayers, is going to this sort of effort.
In a reply to the Slate article posted in the Arkansas Times,
Responsive Education Chief Executive Chuck Cook maintained that "the
curriculum was simply providing examples of competing theories on the
origin of life." He states, "Our science curriculum does examine all
sides of the scientific evidence relating to the theory of evolution —
both for and against — just as we are required to do by the Texas
Essential Knowledge and Skills for Biology."
Jones took the measure of this "we're only teaching both sides"
attack on evolution. In the case before him, a disclaimer read to school
pupils in Dover, Pa., at the outset of their study of evolution, "while
encouraging students to keep an open mind and explore alternatives to
evolution ... offers no scientific alternative; instead, the only
alternative offered is an inherently religious one."
Same here: The choice offered the schools' students is between
evolution, which is chock full of uncertainties according to the text,
or the supernatural.
Textbook publishers and responsible parents have finally started
pushing back against Texas textbook standards, which because of the
state's economic heft threatened to spread unscientific pap throughout
the biology curricula of public schools nationwide.
Just last November, the Texas Board of Education approved high school
texts from 14 publishers that had refused to water down their treatment
of evolution. "None of those textbooks call into question the overwhelming evidence supporting evolution and climate change science," the watchdog group Texas Freedom Network reported.
But as the charter school case shows, creationism still has a way of
sneaking in the back door. It's still not safe for parents to let down
their guard. And it's high time that federal education officials took a
closer look at what's being done with our money.
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