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Evolving Concepts

By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence

Washington, DC (4/10/98)- A new guidebook from the National Academy ofSciences (NAS) may help teachers introduce the concepts of evolution, particularly if they are reluctant to teach the topic because of pressures from special-interest groups.

Studies by the NAS and others indicate that many public school students receive little or no exposure to the theory of evolution. This comes at a time when some people are advocating that creationism be taught in public schools, ins spite of the Supreme Court ruled in 1987 that creationism cannot be mandated in public education.

The new NAS guidebook, Teaching About Evolution and the Nature of Science, attempts to transcend the debate and focus attention on effective instruction. The book provides tools to help integrate lessons about the scientific theory with basic biology for grades K-12.

"The widespread misunderstandings about evolution are of great concern to the scientific community and the Academy," said Bruce Alberts, NAS president and one of the book's authors. "Evolution is the central organizing principle that biologists use to understand the world. If we want our children to have a good grasp of science, we need to help teachers, parents, school administrators, and policy-makers understand both evolution and the nature of science. They also must recognize that many scientists are religious people, and that religion and science represent different approaches to understanding the human condition that are not incompatible with each other."

The new book was a collaborative effort by a group of prominent scientists and educators with extensive experience in education and research on evolution. The authors note that teaching evolution is essential for explaining some of the most fundamental concepts of science. Like all scientific theories, evolution explains natural phenomena by building logically on observations that can be tested and analyzed. The book:

  • summarizes the massive amount of scientific evidence in support of evolution and suggests effective ways of teaching this information
  • explains the nature of science and how it differs from other ways of knowing about the natural world
  • provides eight sample activities that teachers can use to develop students' understanding of evolution and scientific inquiry
  • answers some of the most frequently asked questions about the scientific, legal, and educational issues surrounding the teaching of evolution.
"Biology simply cannot be taught well without covering evolution," said Donald Kennedy, a co-author of the guidebook and Bing Professor of Environmental Studies, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif. "Students who understand the process of evolutionary change are able to grasp its vital practical consequences, such as how bacteria develop resistance to antibiotics. A failure to teach effectively about evolution will rob students of a precious opportunity -- to understand how life on Earth has developed and to appreciate their own place in the world."

Rather than attempt to refute the ideas of those who oppose the teaching of evolution, the new book emphasizes that most religious denominations in the United States do not view evolution as being at odds with their understanding of human origins. The idea that the entire universe was created all at once about 10,000 years ago -- an idea inherent in "creation science" -- is not supported by scientific data.

The book responds to the charge from those opposing the teaching of evolution that it is "just a theory, not a fact," noting that scientists do not use the word "theory" to describe an unsubstantiated idea. In science, theories are explanations based on a large body of established facts. The debate about evolution in the scientific community is focused on the details of how evolution occurs, not whether it occurs, the publication says. The book stresses the consensus among nearly all scientists that biological evolution is the most sound theory to explain the diversity of life.

The new publication is also designed to dovetail with the National Science Education Standards -- voluntary guidelines introduced three years ago by the National Research Council to ensure that all students achieve scientific literacy through improving what is taught, how it is taught, and how students are assessed. The science standards stress the importance of evolution because understanding the theory is essential to mastering basic biology and learning how science works.

Copies of Teaching About Evolution and the Nature of Science are available from the National AcademyPress (1-800-624-6242). The cost of the report is $19.95plus shipping charges of $4.00 for a single copy. Discounts are available for bulk orders.The complete guidebook is also available online (see below).


Related information on the Internet
New NAS Evolution Guidebook
AE: Forum on Evolution
Bruce Alberts Interview
AE Activity: Introducing Evolution
AE Activity: Evolution on Trial
AE: Endangered Galapagos
AE Activity: Beaks of Finches

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