Skip navigation.
Home
The Critic's Resource on AntiEvolution

NCSE Evolution and Climate Education Update for 2013/09/27

  • : Function split() is deprecated in /var/www/vhosts/antievolution/public_html/drupal-4.7.3/modules/filter.module on line 1067.
  • : Function split() is deprecated in /var/www/vhosts/antievolution/public_html/drupal-4.7.3/modules/filter.module on line 1067.
  • : Function split() is deprecated in /var/www/vhosts/antievolution/public_html/drupal-4.7.3/modules/filter.module on line 1067.
  • : Function split() is deprecated in /var/www/vhosts/antievolution/public_html/drupal-4.7.3/modules/filter.module on line 1067.

(by NCSE Deputy Director Glenn Branch)

Dear friends of NCSE,

NCSE's Glenn Branch and Eugenie C. Scott discuss creationist legends
about paleoanthropology in Evolution: Education and Outreach. A survey
assesses the attitudes of Texans to climate change. In the pages of
Scientific American, NCSE's Eugenie C. Scott and Minda Berbeco warn
about the threats to climate education. Barbara Forrest alerts
Pennsylvania about the prospective antiscience bill on the horizon.
And NESCent's Darwin Day Roadshow is accepting applications.

NCSE'S LATEST IN EVOLUTION: EDUCATION AND OUTREACH

"Peking, Piltdown, and Paluxy: Creationist Legends about
Paleoanthropology," by NCSE's Glenn Branch and Eugenie C. Scott, was
just published in Evolution: Education and Outreach. The abstract of
their article: "Because human evolution is often a stumbling block for
accepting evolution, creationist legends about paleoanthropology are
persistent. Three such legends, according to which paleoanthropology
is based on finds that are admittedly fraudulent (Piltdown) or
unadmittedly fraudulent (Peking), or is contravened by neglected finds
(Paluxy), are critically discussed."

Founded in 2008, Evolution: Education and Outreach seeks to promote
the accurate understanding and comprehensive teaching of evolutionary
theory for a wide audience. Starting with its first issue, NCSE
regularly contributed a column under the rubric "Overcoming Obstacles
to Evolution Education." In 2013, the journal became completely open
access, and NCSE plans to continue "Overcoming Obstacles to Evolution
Education" under the new system. The first five volumes of Evolution:
Education and Outreach are now freely available as well.

For "Peking, Piltdown, and Paluxy" (PDF), visit:
http://www.evolution-outreach.com/content/pdf/1936-6434-6-27.pdf 

For the content of the journal from volume 6 (2013) onward, visit:
http://www.evolution-outreach.com/ 

For the content of the journal from volume 1 (2008) to volume 5 (2012), visit:
http://link.springer.com/journal/volumesAndIssues/12052 

POLLING CLIMATE IN TEXAS

Seventy percent of Texans accept that global warming is happening,
according to a new report from the Yale Project on Climate
Communication. But less than half accept that human activity is
responsible for global warming, and more than half deny that there is
a consensus among the scientific community whether global warming is
happening.

The poll defined global warming as "the idea that the world's average
temperature has been increasing over the past 150 years, may be
increasing more in the future, and that the world's climate may change
as a result." Asked, "Do you think that global warming is happening,
or not?" 70% of respondents answered yes, 14% answered no, and 16%
were not sure.

Asked to assume that global warming is happening and asked why, 44% of
respondents said that it was caused mostly by human activities, 31%
said that it was caused mostly by natural changes in the environment,
11% volunteered that it was caused by both, 6% said none of these
because it isn't happening, and 8% volunteered other answers or were
unsure.

Asked about what most scientists think, 43% of respondents said
(correctly) that most scientists think that global warming is
happening, 47% said that there is a lot of disagreement among
scientists about whether or not global warming is happening, 2% said
that most scientists think that global warming is not happening, and
7% were unsure.

The poll was conducted among 800 adult Texans by telephones from July
17 to August 7, 2013. According to the report, "the survey was
administered to respondents reached on traditional landline telephones
... as well as to those reached on cellphones ... The average margin
of error for the total sample [was] +/- 3 percentage points at the 95%
confidence level."

For the report (PDF), visit:
http://environment.yale.edu/climate-communication/files/Texas_Climate_Change_Report.pdf 

And for NCSE's collection of polls and surveys on climate change, visit:
http://ncse.com/polls/polls-climate-change 

NCSE'S SCOTT AND BERBECO IN SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN

Writing in Scientific American, NCSE's Eugenie C. Scott and Minda
Berbeco warn that "a move is afoot to keep climate science out of
classrooms." As they note, "objections to the theory of evolution have
bedeviled individual teachers, school boards, state boards of
education and state legislatures" for decades. Now such objections
have been joined by objections to climate change, both in legislation
purporting to grant "academic freedom" to teachers to miseducate their
students and in resistance to adoption of the Next Generation Science
Standards. But "evolution is one of the most important ideas in human
intellectual history," and the firm scientific consensus is "[t]hat
the planet is warming and that the burning of fossil fuels over the
past 150 years explains the current rapid rate of change." Scott and
Berbeco conclude, "Beginning learners have a right to know what
scientists have concluded. It is not right to allow religious,
political or economic ideologies to trump instruction in science."

For Scott and Berbeco's article in Scientific American, visit:
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=a-move-is-afoot-to-keep-climate-science-out-of-classrooms 

And for NCSE's resources on climate education, visit:
http://ncse.com/climate 

BARBARA FORREST'S WARNING TO PENNSYLVANIA

Writing in the Erie, Pennsylvania, Times-News (September 18, 2013),
Barbara Forrest warned Pennsylvanians about the threatened antiscience
bill in their state. As NCSE previouslyreported, in August 2013,
Stephen Bloom (R-District 199) was circulating a memo seeking
cosponsors for a proposed bill resembling the antiscience bill enacted
in Tennessee in 2012.

Reminding her readers about the 2005 trial in Kitzmiller v. Dover,
establishing that the teaching of "intelligent design" in the public
schools is unconstitutional, Forrest observed that the Discovery
Institute's reaction was to announce its "new front in the debate over
intelligent design -- the need to protect academic freedom."

She continued, "With intelligent design exposed as creationism in
court, the Discovery Institute now conceals its true aims behind the
sanitized code language of 'academic freedom' legislation, seeking to
undermine the teaching of evolution under the guise of 'critical
thinking.' But the Discovery Institute's 'new front' is a shopworn
creationist tactic."

Forrest argued that Bloom's bill pursues the goal of promoting
"intelligent design" creationism: "Pennsylvanians shouldn't be fooled:
Bloom is pushing a stealth intelligent design creationism bill, pure
and simple, and the Discovery Institute plans to exploit
Pennsylvania's legislative process the same way it exploited
Louisiana's and Tennessee's."

So far there is no sign of the bill on the Pennsylvania General
Assembly's website, but the legislature is not currently in session.
The legislature reconvenes on September 23, 2013. Bloom told Fox 43
television (September 4, 2013) that he recruited seven cosponsors for
the bill and hoped to add further cosponsors when the legislature
reconvenes.

Barbara Forrest is Professor of Philosophy at Southeastern Louisiana
University, coauthor (with Paul R. Gross) of Creationism's Trojan
Horse: The Wedge of Intelligent Design (revised edition, Oxford
University Press 2007), and a member of NCSE's board of directors and
a recipient of NCSE's Friend of Darwin award; she testified for the
plaintiffs in Kitzmiller v. Dover.

For Forrest's column in the Times-News, visit:
http://www.goerie.com/article/20130918/OPINION08/309189989/Guest-Voice-of-Barbara-Forrest%3A-Intelligent-design-sneaks-into-public-schools# 

For Fox 43 television's story, visit:
http://fox43.com/2013/09/05/academic-freedom-bill-places-science-up-for-debate 

And for NCSE's previous coverage of events in Pennsylvania, visit:
http://ncse.com/news/pennsylvania 

ON THE ROAD AGAIN WITH NESCENT

The Darwin Day Roadshow is returning! The Roadshow is a project of the
National Evolutionary Synthesis Center, in which NESCent staff shares
their enthusiasm for evolutionary science with students, teachers, and
the general public on the occasion of Charles Darwin's birthday,
February 12. According to NESCent, "Our teams talk to students,
teachers and the general public about their research in evolutionary
science, describe what it takes to become an evolutionary biologist
(and what some of the rewards and challenges are), and convey why
evolutionary science is relevant to everyone."

And the results are delightful: as NESCent's Craig McClain wrote at
Pacific Standard (May 15, 2011), "for all of us the Darwin Day Road
Show was a gratifying adventure that no one will forget. From the
landscapes with their silos, combines, center pivot crop circles, high
school gymnasiums, to the indelible interactions we had along the way,
we absorbed it all." Applications from schools interested in hosting
the Roadshow, especially those who would not be likely to have access
to Darwin Day activities otherwise, are now being accepted. Act soon,
though; the application deadline is November 27, 2013.

For information about NESCent's Darwin Day Roadshow and about applying
to host it, visit:
http://roadshow.nescent.org/ 
http://roadshow.nescent.org/apply/ 

For McClain's article in Pacific Standard, visit:
http://www.psmag.com/science/scientists-take-charles-darwin-on-the-road-31211/ 

Thanks for reading. And don't forget to visit NCSE's website --
http://ncse.com -- where you can always find the latest news on 
evolution and climate education and threats to them.

--
Sincerely,

Glenn Branch
Deputy Director
National Center for Science Education, Inc.
420 40th Street, Suite 2
Oakland, CA 94609-2509
510-601-7203 x305
fax: 510-601-7204
800-290-6006
branch@ncse.com 
http://ncse.com 

Check out NCSE's new blog, Science League of America:
http://ncse.com/blog 

Read Reports of the NCSE on-line:
http://reports.ncse.com 

Subscribe to NCSE's free weekly e-newsletter:
http://groups.google.com/group/ncse-news 

NCSE is on Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter:
http://www.facebook.com/evolution.ncse 
http://www.youtube.com/NatCen4ScienceEd 
http://twitter.com/ncse 

NCSE's work is supported by its members. Join today!
http://ncse.com/join