NCSE Evolution and Climate Education Update for 2014/02/21
(by NCSE Deputy Director Glenn Branch)
Dear friends of NCSE, Public opinion about climate change and about evolution is canvassed in the National Science Board's Science and Engineering Indicators for 2014. A second antievolution bill surfaces, or resurfaces, in Oklahoma, but in South Carolina there is reportedly a withdrawal of opposition to evolution in the state science standards. A new issue of Reports of the NCSE is available on-line. The National Association of Biology Teachers registers its opposition to the (first) antievolution bill in Oklahoma. And sad news of the death of Aykut Kence.
CLIMATE IN SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING INDICATORS 2014 Public opinion about climate change was reviewed in the National Science Board's Science and Engineering Indicators 2014. Climate change, according to the NSB's report, has "been the subject of widespread polling in recent years, with evidence showing clear shifts in views" (p. 7-40). A 2012 survey from the Pew Research Center was cited as showing that 67% of Americans accept that the earth is getting warning and about two thirds of them (so 42% of respondents) attribute the cause to "human activity such as burning fossil fuels" while one third (so 19% of respondents) attribute the cause to "natural patterns in the earth's environment. The historical high for the "human activity" answer is 50% in 2006; the historical low is 36% in 2009. "Many of the other countries surveyed show more concern than the United States about climate change," the NSB's report adds (p. 7-5). According to a 2010 survey from Gallup, asked about the causes of rising temperatures as part of global warming or climate change, 34% of respondents in the United States, 46% of Eastern Europeans, 49% of Western Europeans, 56% of Latin Americans, and 76% of respondents in "developed Asia" said that it was a result of human activities. Only respondents in sub-Saharan Africa (22%), Middle East and North Africa (25%), and "developing Asia" (27%) were less likely to agree than Americans. A variety of reports and commentaries on previous polls about public opinion about climate science is available on NCSE's website. For chapter 7 of Science and Engineering Indicators 2014 (PDF), visit: http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/seind14/content/chapter-7/c07.pdf For the surveys from Pew and Gallup, visit: http://www.people-press.org/2012/10/15/more-say-there-is-solid-evidence-of-global-warming/ http://www.gallup.com/poll/147242/Worldwide-Blame-Climate-Change-Falls-Humans.aspx And for NCSE's collection of polls and surveys on climate, visit: http://ncse.com/polls/polls-climate-change EVOLUTION IN SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING INDICATORS 2014 Public opinion about evolution, the Big Bang, and teaching evolution in public schools was reviewed in the National Science Board's Science and Engineering Indicators 2014. The 2012 General Social Survey experimented with two versions of true/false questions addressing evolution and the Big Bang. Half of the survey respondents received versions focusing on the natural world -- "human beings, as we know them today, developed from earlier species of animals" and "the universe began with a big explosion" -- while half received versions focusing on the scientific community -- "according to the theory of evolution, human beings, as we know them today, developed from earlier species of animals" and "according to astronomers, the universe began with a big explosion." According to the NSB's report, "For evolution, 48% of Americans answered 'true' when presented with the statement that human beings evolved from earlier species with no preface, whereas 72% of those who received the prefaced said 'true,' a 24 percentage point difference. ... For the big bang question, the pattern was very similar: in 2012, 39% of Americans answered 'true' when presented with the statement about the origin of the universe without the preface, whereas 60% of those who heard the statement with the preface answered 'true.' This represents a 21 percentage point difference" (p. 7-21). As NCSE previously reported, the questions about evolution and the Big Bang were deleted from the 2010 edition of Science and Engineering Indicators, a decision which drew criticism at the time, including from veteran science literacy researcher Jon Miller, who originally devised the question about evolution, and from NCSE's Joshua Rosenau. The NSB eventually acknowledged that it was a mistake, and in the 2012 edition, as in the 2014 edition, the questions about evolution and the Big Bang were discussed. But in the 2010 edition and in all subsequent editions, those questions are not used in the assessment of scientific literacy. "Public views about evolution and the role of teaching evolution in the schools have been relatively stable over the course of 30 years," according to the NSB's report, which highlights two key patterns, citing work by Michael Berkman and Eric Plutzer. "First, when asked whether intelligent design should be taught alongside or in addition to evolution, a majority of Americans favor this approach to education." "Second, when asked whether creation should be taught instead of evolution -- thereby replacing it in the science curriculum -- a majority oppose those idea, but a sizeable minority favors it" (p. 7-45). A variety of reports and commentaries on previous polls about public opinion about evolution and teaching evolution is available on NCSE's website. For chapter 7 of Science and Engineering Indicators 2014 (PDF), visit: http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/seind14/content/chapter-7/c07.pdf For NCSE's report on the deletion of the questions about evolution and the Big Bang, visit: http://ncse.com/news/2012/02/evolution-partly-restored-to-nsb-report-0013853 And for NCSE's collection of polls and surveys, visit: http://ncse.com/creationism/polls-surveys A SECOND ANTISCIENCE BILL IN OKLAHOMA A bill in Oklahoma that would, if enacted, deprive administrators of the ability to prevent teachers from miseducating students about "scientific controversies" is back from the dead. House Bill 1674, styled the Scientific Education and Academic Freedom Act, was supposed to have died in the Oklahoma House of Representatives on March 14, 2013, when a deadline for bills to have their third reading in their house of origin passed. But it is now listed as available for consideration on the House floor in the afternoon of February 18, 2014. The first antiscience bill in Oklahoma for 2014, Senate Bill 1765, sponsored by Josh Brecheen (R-District 6), is currently before the Senate Education Committee. House Bill 1674, would, if enacted, require state and local educational authorities to "assist teachers to find more effective ways to present the science curriculum where it addresses scientific controversies" and permit teachers to "help students understand, analyze, critique, and review in an objective manner the scientific strengths and scientific weaknesses of existing scientific theories pertinent to the course being taught," prohibiting administrators from interfering. As introduced, the bill specifically mentions "biological evolution, the chemical origins of life, global warming, and human cloning" as subjects which "some teachers may be unsure" about how to teach. The House sponsors of HB 1674 are Gus Blackwell (R-District 61) and Sally Kern (R-District 84). In 2012, Blackwell revived House Bill 1551, which was originally introduced in the Oklahoma House of Representatives by Kern in 2011. HB 1551 was rejected in the House Common Education Committee in 2011, but Blackwell resurrected the bill in 2012, adding a reference to controversial "premises in the areas of biology, chemistry, meteorology, bioethics and physics." The revised bill quickly passed the House Common Education Committee, which amended it slightly to provide "Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to exempt students from learning, understanding, and being tested on curriculum as prescribed by state and local education standards." HB 1551 passed the House of Representatives on March 15, 2012, by which time it managed to attract condemnation from national scientific and educational organizations. The American Association for the Advancement of Science's chief executive officer Alan I. Leshner expressed his concerns with the bill, for example, writing in a March 21, 2012, letter, "There is virtually no scientific controversy among the overwhelming majority of researchers on the core facts of global warming and evolution," and adding, "asserting that there are significant scientific controversies about the overall nature of these concepts when there are none will only confuse students, not enlighten them." HB 1551 died in the Senate Education Committee in April 2012. The new bill, HB 1674, is apparently identical to the final version of HB 1551 as passed by the House of Representatives and unconsidered by the Senate, and only slightly different from Oklahoma's Senate Bill 320 from 2009, which a member of the Senate Education Committee memorably described to the Tulsa World (February 17, 2009) as one of the worst bills that he had ever seen. In its detailed critique of SB 320, Oklahomans for Excellence in Science Education argued, "Promoting the notion that there is some scientific controversy is just plain dishonest." With respect to the supposed "weaknesses" of evolution, OESE added, "they are phony fabrications, invented and promoted by people who don't like evolution." In The Oklahoma Daily (March 6, 2013), Richard E. Broughton of the University of Oklahoma described HB 1674 as "a 'Trojan horse' bill specifically crafted by an out-of-state, religious think tank to open the door for the teaching of religious or political views in school science classes. This is clearly understood by everyone familiar with the bill on both sides. HB 1674 would write false claims about science into state law, contradicting the wealth of scientific evidence, our own curriculum standards and the expertise of Oklahoma's scientists and teachers." He concluded, "Passage of this bill will damage the education of our students, diminish the ability to attract scientifically-based industries to Oklahoma and will likely lead to costly lawsuits over constitutionality." For the text of House Bill 1674 as before the House (PDF), visit: http://webserver1.lsb.state.ok.us/cf_pdf/2013-14%20FLR/HFLR/HB1674%20HFLR.PDF For Richard E. Broughton's critique of House Bill 1674, visit: http://www.oudaily.com/opinion/letter-to-the-editor-ou-professor-opposes-controversial-academic-freedom/article_5d092ac2-8bc4-5158-967d-92a7d181d0d0.html And for NCSE's previous coverage of events in Oklahoma, visit: http://ncse.com/news/oklahoma A REVERSAL IN SOUTH CAROLINA? Just three days after the South Carolina Education Oversight Committee refused to approve a section of the new state science standards involving evolution, Senator Mike Fair (R-District 6), a member of the committee whose opposition was responsible for the refusal, is reportedly withdrawing his objection. Fair told the Charleston City Paper (February 13, 2014), "I support the scientific standards as they were given to our subcommittee," adding, "I just needed a few days to look at the possible overreach of the terminology, and it's not there." "We are, of course, very pleased to learn that Senator Fair has changed his mind about this important issue," South Carolinians for Science Education's Robert T. Dillon, a professor of biology at the College of Charleston, told NCSE. Dillon added, "We hope that the deleted material regarding natural selection can be patched back into the standards without further delay in the process." It remains unclear when the EOC will reconsider the standards. The committee's next meeting is scheduled for April 14, 2014, and its agenda is not yet posted. In a subsequent story, the Charleston City Paper (February 14, 2014) wondered about Fair's delay in accepting the standard: "either Fair needed two more days to parse the verbiage, or it was all a saber-rattling publicity stunt." NCSE's Glenn Branch observed that antievolution politicians sometimes indulge in "a kind of chest-thumping that is pandering to their base," adding, "So when election season comes around, they can go home and say, 'Well, I introduced this bill and it didn't go through, but re-elect me and I'll introduce it again.'" Dillon told the newspaper that Fair "gets his marching orders" from the Discovery Institute, the de facto institutional home of "intelligent design" creationism, but Fair demurred, saying, "I talk to them regularly, but their views aren't like mine." Fair is a young-earth creationist, but Dillon observed that "his latest shenanigans" are similar to the Discovery Institute's strategy: "The idea, Dillon says, is to suggest that the theory of evolution is somehow controversial among scientists, or that it 'needs further study,' without explicitly offering an alternative theory." The South Carolina board of education voted in 2014 to accept the new set of science standards, rejecting two different proposals that would have compromised the treatment of evolution in the process. The EOC was supposed to have voted on the standards before the board's vote, but instead sent the standards to the board with a list of recommended changes, including a revision that seemed to be intended to open the door to the use of non-scientific critiques of evolution. Both the EOC and the state board must agree on the standards for them to be adopted. For the two articles in the Charleston City Paper, visit: http://www.charlestoncitypaper.com/TheBattery/archives/2014/02/13/sc-sen-mike-fair-drops-opposition-to-evolution-teaching-standards http://www.charlestoncitypaper.com/charleston/the-long-defeat-sen-mike-fairs-fight-against-evolution-in-sc-schools/Content?oid=4864627 And for NCSE's previous coverage of events in South Carolina, visit: http://ncse.com/news/south-carolina RNCSE 34:1 NOW ON-LINE NCSE is pleased to announce that the latest issue of Reports of the National Center for Science Education is now available on-line. The issue -- volume 34, number 1 -- features Joseph E. Armstrong and Marshall D. Sundberg's "Yes, Bobby, Evolution is True!"; Barbara Forrest's "Louisiana's Love Affair with Creationism"; and Stanley A. Rice's "Confessions of an Oklahoma Evolutionist." And for his regular People and Places column, Randy Moore discusses the petroleum magnate and paleontology fan Harry Sinclair. Plus a host of reviews of books on evolutionary biology: Robert M. Cox reviews Daphne J. Fairbairn's Odd Couples, James H. Hunt reviews Robert E. Page Jr.'s The Spirit of the Hive, Roy E. Plotnick reviews Douglas H. Erwin and James W. Valentine's The Cambrian Explosion, John H. Relethford reviews Edward O. Wilson's The Social Conquest of Earth, Christopher Irwin Smith reviews John N. Thompson's Relentless Evolution, and Tara C. Smith reviews Roberto Kolter and Stanley Maloy's edited collected Microbes and Evolution. All of these articles, features, and reviews are freely available in PDF form from http://reports.ncse.com. Members of NCSE will shortly be receiving in the mail the print supplement to Reports 34:1, which, in addition to summaries of the on-line material, contains news from the membership, a regular column in which NCSE staffers offer personal reports on what they've been doing to defend the teaching of evolution, a regular column interviewing NCSE's favorite people, and more besides. (Not a member? Join today!) For the table of contents for RNCSE 34:1, visit: http://reports.ncse.com/index.php/rncse/issue/current/showToc For information about joining NCSE, visit: http://ncse.com/join NABT OPPOSES OKLAHOMA'S ANTISCIENCE BILL The National Association of Biology Teachers expressed its opposition to Oklahoma's Senate Bill 1765, which, if enacted, would deprive administrators of the ability to prevent teachers from miseducating students about "scientific controversies." Although no scientific topics are specifically identified as controversial, the fact that the primary sponsor of SB 1765 is Josh Brecheen (R-District 6), who introduced similar legislation that directly targeted evolution in two previous legislative sessions, is suggestive. The bill is presently before the Senate Education Committee. Dated February 12, 2014, and addressed to the chair of the Senate Education Committee, NABT's letter warned that the bill "could easily permit non-science based discussions of 'strengths and weaknesses' to take place in science classrooms, confusing students about the nature of science. Well-established scientific principles and theories such as cell division, photosynthesis, or evolution should not be misrepresented as controversial, or in need of special exploration. Instead, they should be presented to students as they are understood by both the scientific and education communities." For Oklahoma's Senate Bill 1765 as introduced (document), visit: http://www.oklegislature.gov/BillInfo.aspx?Bill=sb1765 For NABT's letter (PDF), visit: http://ncse.com/files/NABT-Letter-SB-1765.pdf AYKUT KENCE DIES The Turkish biologist Aykut Kence died on February 1, 2014, at the age of 67, according to soL Portal (February 1, 2014). A pioneer in evolutionary biology and population genetics in Turkey, and a mentor to many of the country's evolutionary biologists, he was also a tireless advocate for the teaching of evolution, opposing the government's attempts to include creationism in the Turkish biology curriculum and the efforts of fundamentalist groups to undermine the teaching of evolution. Writing in Reports of the NCSE in 1999, Kence and a colleague reviewed the history of evolution education in the Turkish Republic. From 1923, when the country was founded, to 1948, education was wholly secular. The rise of fundamentalism after World War II eventually ushered creationism to the biology classroom in the 1980s, thanks to a minister of education impressed with "scientific creationism," and textbooks were revised to teach evolution "in a biased, ludicrous, and non-scientific way." A change in government in 1998 led to temporary improvements in evolution education. But these improvements "infuriated and mobilized those who wanted evolution to be taken out of the curriculum," including powerful Turkish politicians as well as the Islamic creationist organization headed by the pseudonymous Harun Yahya, which launched -- and continues -- a well-funded and ill-founded blitz against evolution, both in Turkey and worldwide. The result is that Turkey enjoys the lowest rate of acceptance of evolution in the developed world, according to a 2005 study published in Science, and as Kence and two colleagues wrote in Science and Education in 2010, "[c]urrently most students at K-12 and beyond in Turkey are not provided with a scientific understanding of the origin and history of life." From the 1980s to his death, Kence consistently was at the forefront of scientists working to counter and reverse the antievolution activity in Turkey -- even despite receiving anonymous death threats. "I won't let them silence me," Kence told the journal Science in 2001. "If knowledgeable people keep quiet, it only helps those who spread nonsense." Aykut Kence was born in Istanbul, Turkey, on August 27, 1946. He received his diploma in zoology and botany from Istanbul University in 1968 and then earned his Ph.D. in biology from the State University of New York, Stony Brook, in 1973. After a postdoctoral stint at the University of Houston, he returned to Turkey, spending the rest of his career in the biology department of the Middle East Technical University of Ankara. He served as the president of the Biological Association of Turkey from 1988 to 1992. For the obituary from soL Portal, visit: http://haber.sol.org.tr/bilim-teknoloji/prof-dr-aykut-kenceyi-kaybettik-haberi-86993 For Kence's coauthored article in Reports of the NCSE, visit: http://ncse.com/rncse/19/6/islamic-scientific-creationism For Kence's coauthored article in Science Education (subscription required), visit: http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs11191-009-9199-1 For the Science article on rates of acceptance of evolution (subscription required), visit: http://www.sciencemag.org/content/313/5788/765.full For Science's 2001 report on creationism in Turkey (subscription required), visit: http://www.sciencemag.org/content/292/5520/1286.full WHAT'S NEW FROM THE SCIENCE LEAGUE OF AMERICA Have you been visiting NCSE's blog, The Science League of America, recently? If not, then you've missed: * Ann Reid wishing a happy Presidents' Day to Lincoln: http://ncse.com/blog/2014/02/happy-presidents-day-mr-lincoln-0015403 * Josh Rosenau considering which president was the most science-friendly: http://ncse.com/blog/2014/02/which-was-most-science-friendly-president-0015406 * Eugenie C. Scott remembering the late Robert Schadewald: http://ncse.com/blog/2014/02/thinking-bob-0015411 * Glenn Branch assessing a history lesson from The Atlantic: http://ncse.com/blog/2014/02/berlatsky-s-history-lesson-part-1-0015387 http://ncse.com/blog/2014/02/berlatsky-s-history-lesson-part-2-0015388 * Steve Newton pondering a bevy of questions from creationists: http://ncse.com/blog/2014/02/you-can-t-get-their-sic-from-here-what-buzzfeed-s-questions-0015381 And much more besides! For The Science League of America, visit: http://ncse.com/blog 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