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When
two groups of experts disagree about a controversial subject that
intersects the public school curriculum students should learn about both
perspectives.
In
such cases teachers should not teach that only one of the competing views
is true.
Instead, teachers should describe competing views to students and explain
the arguments for and against these views as made by their chief
proponents.
Educators call this "teaching the controversy." Recently, while speaking
to the Ohio State Board of Education, I suggested this approach as a way
forward for Ohio in its increasingly contentious dispute about how to
teach theories of biological origin and about whether or not to introduce
the theory of intelligent design alongside Darwinism.
I
suggested (as an advocate of the theory of intelligent design) that Ohio
not require students to know the scientific evidence and arguments for the
theory of intelligent design---at least not yet. Instead, I proposed that
Ohio teachers teach the scientific controversy about Darwinian evolution.
Teachers should teach students about the main scientific arguments for and
against Darwinian theory. And Ohio should test students for their
understanding of those arguments---not for their assent to a point of
view.
I
argued that the state board should permit, but not require, teachers to
tell students about the arguments of scientists such as Lehigh University
biochemist Michael Behe who advocate the competing theory of intelligent
design.
There are many reasons for Ohio to adopt this approach. Honest science
education requires it. While testifying before the state board, biologist
Dr. Jonathan Wells and I submitted an annotated bibliography of over 40
peer-reviewed scientific articles that raise significant challenges to key
tenets of Darwinian evolution. If students are to be required to master
the case for Darwinian evolution (as we think they should), shouldn’t they
also know some of the difficulties described in such scientific
literature.
Shouldn’t students know that many scientists doubt that the overall
pattern of fossil evidence conforms to the Darwinian picture of the
history of life? Shouldn’t they know that some scientists now question
previously stock Darwinian arguments from embryology and homology? And
shouldn’t they also know that many scientists now question the ability of
natural selection to create fundamentally new structures, organisms and
body plans?
Last fall, 100 scientists, including professors from institutions such as
MIT, Yale and Rice, published a statement questioning the creative power
of natural selection. Shouldn’t students know why?
Constitutional law permits "teaching controversy" about scientific
theories of origins. In the controlling Edwards v. Aguillard case,
the Supreme Court made clear that state legislatures (and by extension
state school boards) already have the right to mandate teaching scientific
critiques of prevailing theories. Interestingly, the court also made
clear that teachers have the right to teach students about "a variety of
scientific theories about origins…with the clear secular intent of
enhancing science education."
Our compromise proposal requires teach existing scientific critique of
Darwinism, and permits discussion of competing theories, just as the Court
allows.
Federal education policy calls for precisely this kind of approach. The
report language accompanying the federal education act ("No Child Left
Behind") states that "where topics are taught that may generate
controversy (such as biological evolution), the curriculum should help
students to understand the full range of views that exist [and] why such
topics may generate controversy."
Some have dismissed this language as irrelevant to Ohio’s deliberations
because it appears in the report accompanying the federal education act,
not in the act itself. But report language typically articulates
Congress’ interpretation of law and guides its implementation. As such,
report language expresses federal policy. In this case, as Ohio’s John
Boehner, chair of the House Education Committee, has advised the Ohio
Board, the report language makes clear that "science standards not be used
to censor debate on controversial issues in science including Darwin’s
theory of evolution.
Voters overwhelmingly favor this approach. In a recent national Zogby
poll, 71 percent of those polled stated their support for teaching
evidence both for and against Darwin’s theory of evolution. Only 15
percent opposed this approach. An even greater majority favored exposing
students to "evidence that points to an intelligent design of life."
Finally, good pedagogy commends this approach. Teaching the controversy
about Darwinism as it exists in the scientific community will engage
student interest. It will motivate students to learn more about the
biological evidence as they see why it matters to a big question. This is
not only good teaching it is good science. As Darwin wrote in Origin
of Species, "A fair result can be obtained only by fully stating and
balancing the facts and arguments on both sides of each question."
Yet, the modern Darwinist lobby continues to distract attention from their
advocacy of censorship by reciting a litany of complaints about the
emerging theory of intelligent design. But that theory is not the issue
in Ohio. The issue is whether students will learn both sides of the real
and growing scientific controversy about Darwinism and whether a 19th
century theory will be taught dogmatically to 21st century
students.
*
Stephen C. Meyer received his PhD in the philosophy of science from
Cambridge University. He is a Senior Fellow and directs Discovery
Institute’s Center for Science and Culture in Seattle, Washington.
Stephen Meyer’s "The
Origin of Biological Information and the Higher Taxonomic Categories"
created ripples when published in the peer-reviewed, August 4, 2004 issue
of the Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, volume
117, no.2,pp. 213-239.
The Discovery
Institute’s Center for Science and Culture notes that "Dr. Meyer argues
that no current materialistic theory of evolution can account for the
information necessary to build novel animal forms. He proposes
intelligent design as an alternative explanation for the origin of
biological information and the higher taxa." The full text of his article
is available on line at
www.discovery.org.
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