RECENT EVOLUTION / CREATION
SCIENCE CONFLICTS IN U.S. SCHOOLS
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Overview:
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Protestant religious schools: There is little conflict over evolution within
most
Christian home schooling programs and Christian religious schools. Creation science is taught there as the only valid
belief system concerning the history of the world, its life forms and the rest
of the universe. Naturalistic and theistic Evolution is generally rejected.
However, there seems to be an increasing trend among some Christian high schools
and colleges to abandon creation science in favor of theistic evolution -- the
concept that evolution of the species happened on earth over billions of years,
and that God used evolution as a tool to create the species that we see today. "Experts
say theistic evolution is showing up in a growing number of Christian colleges.
For example, Wheaton College in Wheaton, Ill., recently invited a guest speaker
from Kansas State University to lecture on the topic. And Calvin College in
Grand Rapids, Mich., also presents biology and geology from that point of view."
John Mark Reynolds, of Biola University in La Mirada, CA, suggests that parents
check out the purity of school teaching by inquiring whether the entire faculty
believes in a literal Adam and Eve, by studying the course descriptions
carefully, by examining the student newspaper for discussions on evolution, and
by using an Internet search engine to find and study any papers that school
professors have written about origins.
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Roman Catholic schools: Among parochial (called "separate
schools" in Canada) schools, there is also little discord.
The schools have accepted, and taught evolution and the origin of the species
for decades. However, the Church teaches that God has specially created the
human soul and thus differentiated humans from the lower animals.
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Public schools: It is in the U.S. public schools that the battle between
evolution and creation science rages. After the Scopes
Trial (Tennessee, 1925) the theory of evolution gained much public support. 1
However, this did not translate into evolution being taught widely in the public
schools. It took the Russian satellite Sputnik in the late 1950's to convince
the country that the U.S. was falling behind in science. The National Science
Foundation funded the Biological Sciences Curriculum Study, which was
influential in returning evolution to high school biology textbooks. In the 1960's, evolution
began to be widely taught.
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State creationism laws were passed during the 1980's in Arkansas and
Louisiana, to force the teaching of creationism in place of evolution. In a 1987
case, Edwards v. Aquillard, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that these laws were unconstitutional because they violated the establishment
clause of the 1st Amendment of the U.S. constitution. Creation science was
seen to be a expression of religious belief. It was judged to be not a true
science because it could never be falsified -- i.e., it was firmly held as a religious belief
by its adherents that no amount of contradictory physical evidence could change. During the mid 1990's,
creation science groups started to persuade school boards to give equal time
to creation science. More recently, they have promoted the teaching that the theory
of evolution contains internal contradictions. More details.
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Is the conflict solvable?
The battle between evolution and creation science will not be settled in the foreseeable future:
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Most conservative Protestants believe in the
literal truth of the stories of creation found in the book of Genesis in the
Hebrew Scriptures (Old Testament). They interpret the Hebrew word "Yom"
as implying that creation took six actual 24-hour days. This implies an earth that is less than ten
thousand years old. |
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A minority of conservative Protestants, most liberal
Protestants, the Roman Catholic Church, and most scientists accept
either Theistic Evolution or Naturalistic Evolution. Both accept that
evolution of the species has happened, and that the earth is over 4
billion years of age -- some 500,000 times older than young-earth
creationists believe. |
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Over 95% of scientists generally, and over 99% of scientists
in the fields of biology and earth sciences, accept the theory of evolution.
These beliefs require the earth to be many billions of years old.
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General acceptance of creation science would mean that the entire
foundational structure and inter-relationships of many sciences (geology, biology, astronomy,
nuclear science, etc.) would become meaningless, and would have to be
abandoned. |
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General acceptance of theistic or naturalistic evolution requires people to interpret
Genesis symbolically or to reclassify the creation stories as myths.
However, the creation stories are closely tied to the
fall of man and to
original sin. The latter are two key beliefs among many
Christians. If Genesis were interpreted as symbolic, as a myth, fable or
fantasy, then the entire role of Jesus would have to be reinterpreted.
Without original sin, there is no obvious need for a savior. Jews
do not have this problem; although they share Genesis with Christians, they
never developed the concept of original sin. Liberal Christians also have no
problem; most have already concluded that Genesis is a myth. But the
rejection of original sin would shake conservative Christianity to its
knees. |
The battle over the teaching of creation science in
the public schools will not be resolved soon either. The concept of separation
of church and state that is contained within the First
Amendment of the Constitution requires that public schools do not
teach that:
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one religion as superior to any other religion, or
that |
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religion is superior to a secular lifestyle. |
Thus, creation science could be taught in the public
schools as part of the regular science curriculum. It can be argued that
it is important that it be taught in order that the students become fully
aware of the range of beliefs about origins. But, in order to be
constitutional in the U.S.:
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Creation science can only be taught as a concept that
some people believe in; it cannot be taught as actual truth. |
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Creation science based on the biblical book of Genesis
cannot constitutionally be discussed in isolation. The beliefs
of other religions, and of secular movements would have to be
taught along with the Judeo-Christian belief. Otherwise, Judaism and
Christianity would seen as being promoted by the school as superior to
other religions and to a secular lifestyle. |
Public opinion polls:
1999-AUG: ABCNEWS.com quoted The Gallup Organization's most
recent results relating to public opinion about the teaching of creationism in
public schools: 2
Item |
In favor |
Opposed |
No opinion |
Teach creationism and evolution |
68% |
29% |
3% |
Teach creationism instead of evolution |
40% |
55% |
5% |
DYG Inc, a opinion research firm, conducted a public opinion
poll among U.S. adults in the wake of the Kansas Board of Education's decision
to not require evolution to be taught in the state's public schools. The
poll was sponsored by People for the American Way. They found that
"There is broad agreement that schools should acknowledge that some
people have creationist beliefs and even teach about those beliefs - but
not as science. There is also a strong consensus not only that
schools should teach evolution, but that how they handle the subject along
with creationist beliefs should be a matter of national policy, not just a
local matter to be decided by each state or school district." Specific
finding were:
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Almost half of American adults have never heard of "Creation
Science." |
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60% oppose the decision by the Kansas Board of Education to drop
evolution from state science standards. |
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83% believe that evolution should be taught in public schools. Of
these:
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20% say that only evolution should be taught in schools. |
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17% say that only evolution should be taught in science class;
creation science could be taught in other, non-science, classes |
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29% would allow the teaching in science class of both evolution
as a scientific theory and creation science as a belief. |
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About 70% feel that evolution and creation science can be
harmonized. |
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Fewer than 30% want creation science taught in science class as a
scientific belief. |
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13% want creation science and evolution taught together as science. |
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16% want creation science to be taught as the only scientific
theory. 8 |
2002-JAN: Channel One news supplies a cable news program to about
12,000 public schools in the U.S. They conducted a non-scientific, online
poll of student's attitudes towards the teaching of origins. 6
They asked: "...which theory should be taught in school? Creationism,
Evolution or Both?" Results were:
Teach creationism only |
Teach evolution only |
Teach both |
31% |
17% |
52% |
Unfortunately, the poll did not sample students' opinion on how origins
should be taught. Some might prefer creation and evolution to be taught
side-by-side in science class, as alternate belief systems. Others might
prefer that evolution be taught in science class, because essentially all
earth and biological scientists accept the theory.
Creation stories from various religions could then be taught in a
comparative religion course.
Recent battles in the war:
Some of the recent bills and laws considered by state
legislatures are clearly
unconstitutional. They place local school boards in a difficult position. If
they refuse to implement the laws, their funding may be cut. If they follow the
laws, they become vulnerable to lawsuits that they will undoubtedly lose. The
cost of these court actions could impoverish small school districts. They also
cause conflict for individual legislators: If they vote in favor of some
of these laws, they will be violating their oath of office which is to
uphold the state and national Constitution; if they vote against some of
the laws, they will lose significant voting support in the next
election.
Some past developments in the teaching of evolution in
public schools:
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1987: National: The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that public
schools cannot teach creationism in science classes. |
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Late 1990's: State school boards in Arizona, Alabama,
Illinois, New Mexico, Texas and Nebraska have tried to either
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no longer mandate the teaching of evolution, or |
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de-emphasize the teaching of evolution 3 |
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1998: North Carolina: The North Carolina House passed a bill which mandates that
evolution be presented as a theory, not as a fact. |
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1999: Kansas: The Kansas Board of Education abandoned
the recommendations of their own science panel and established new state science standards.
They announced that students would not be tested on their knowledge of
evolution. "Studies
of data regarding fossils, geologic tables, cosmological information are
encouraged. But standards regarding origins are not mandated." 5
This policy was overturned in 2001 after the election of a new
board. |
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1999: Kentucky: The Kentucky State Education Department substituted
the term "change over time" for "evolution" in
their curriculum. |
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2000: Louisiana: The
U.S. Supreme Court declared the Tangipahoa Parish school board's disclaimer to be
unconstitutional. The board had required its teachers to announce that evolution was just "presented
to inform students of the scientific concept and [was] not intended to
influence or dissuade the biblical version of creation or any other
concept..." |
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2001: Hawaii: Denise Matsumoto, chair of the
Regular Education Committee, of the Hawaii State Board of
Education proposed that evolution and creation science be taught as
competing theories in science class. It was unanimously rejected by the
board. |
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2005: Georgia: A federal judge ordered that the Cobb County
school board remove stickers that they had ordered placed on science
text books. The stickers state: "This textbook contains material on
evolution. Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of
living things. This material should be approached with an open mind,
studied carefully and critically considered."
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More details on recent events can be seen in our listing of evolution
& creation science news items.
References used:
The following information sources were used to prepare and update the above
essay. The hyperlinks are not necessarily still valid today.
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"Scopes trial grips nation," at:
http://abcnews.go.com/century/feature/
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Kenneth Chang, "Evolutionary beliefs,"
ABCNEWS, 1999-AUG-16. Available online at: http://abcnews.go.com/
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David Miles, "Kansas drops evolution,"
Associated Press, at: http://abcnews.go.com/
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Stuart
Shepard, "Some Bible Colleges Soft on Origins Doctrine," Focus on the
Family, at:
http://www.family.org/
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Bill Brewster & Kenneth Chang, "Latest evolution
battlefield," ABCNEWS at: http://abcnews.go.com/
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Stuart
Shepard, "Poll: Students Favor Teaching Creation," Focus on the
Family, at:
http://www.family.org/
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Tim Harper, "Darwin beats God in red America," The Toronto
Star, 2005-JAN-14, Page A17.
Copyright © 1999 to 2005 incl., by Ontario
Consultants on Religious Tolerance
Latest update: 2005-AUG-09
Author: B.A. Robinson
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