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Zerodivider
11-27-2006, 05:22 AM
http://education.guardian.co.uk/schools/story/0,,1957858,00.html



Revealed: rise of creationism in UK schools


PR packs spread controversial theory

James Randerson, science correspondent
Monday November 27, 2006
The Guardian

Dozens of schools are using creationist teaching materials condemned by the government as "not appropriate to support the science curriculum", the Guardian has learned.

The packs promote the creationist alternative to Darwinian evolution called intelligent design and the group behind them said 59 schools are using the information as "a useful classroom resource".

A teacher at one of the schools said it intended to use the DVDs to present intelligent design as an alternative to Darwinism. Nick Cowan, head of chemistry at Bluecoat school, in Liverpool, said: "Just because it takes a negative look at Darwinism doesn't mean it is not science. I think to critique Darwinism is quite appropriate."

But the government has made it clear that "neither intelligent design nor creationism are recognised scientific theories". The chairman of the parliamentary science and technology select committee, the Lib Dem MP Phil Willis, said he was horrified that the packs were being used in schools.

"I am flabbergasted that any head of science would give credence to this creationist theory and be prepared to put it alongside Darwinism," he said. "Treating it as an alternative centralist theory alongside Darwinism in science lessons is deeply worrying."

The teaching pack, which includes two DVDs and a manual, was sent to the head of science at all secondary schools in the country on September 18 by the group Truth in Science. The enclosed feedback postcard was returned by 89 schools. As well as 59 positive responses, 15 were negative or dismissive and 15 said the material was "not suitable".

"We are not attacking the teaching of Darwinian theory," said Richard Buggs, a member of Truth in Science. "We are just saying that criticisms of Darwin's theory should also be taught."

"Intelligent design looks at empirical evidence in the natural world and says, 'this is evidence for a designer'. If you go any further the argument does become religious and intelligent design does have religious implications," added Dr Buggs.

But leading scientists argue that ID is not science because it invokes supernatural causes. "There is just no evidence for intelligent design, it is pure religion and has nothing to do with science. It should be banned from science classes," said Lewis Wolpert, a developmental biologist at the University of London and vice-president of the British Humanist Association.

The DVDs were produced in America and feature figures linked to the Discovery Institute in Seattle, a thinktank that has made concerted efforts to promote ID and insert it into high school science lessons in the US. Last year a judge in Dover, Pennsylvania, ruled that ID could not be taught in science lessons. "Intelligent design is a religious view, a mere relabelling of creationism, and not a scientific theory," he wrote in his judgment.

It is not clear exactly how many schools are using the Truth in Science material, or how it is being used.

The government has made it clear the Truth in Science materials should not be used in science lessons. In a response to the Labour MP Graham Stringer on November 1, Jim Knight, a minister in the Department for Education and Skills, wrote: "Neither intelligent design nor creationism are recognised scientific theories and they are not included in the science curriculum."

Andy McIntosh, a professor of thermodynamics at the University of Leeds who is on the board of Truth in Science, said: "We are just simply a group of people who have put together ... a different case."

vrb
11-27-2006, 06:06 AM
Good grief....

These retards are here now. What next is science lessons:

Teacher: This is how nuclear energy works. Plutonium goes into a nuclear reactor...Then a miracle occurs!! And out comes electricity....Praise the lord!!!

Science is science.

What next? The tellytubbies sing songs of praise?

alfigel
11-27-2006, 08:14 AM
Good grief....

These retards are here now.

The problem: they aren't as retarded as one might think. In fact, they use clever techniques to promote ID, e.g. by claiming that there is a "controversy" between ID and evolution although there is none. Let's just ignore them. They already got more media attention than they deserved.

NSX-R
11-27-2006, 06:26 PM
Science is more like "here's the world, let's understand its functions through observations so we can understand it better and manipulate it for our advantage." It's one viewpoint that tries to explain nature; religion tries to cover what can't be explained by science. I prefer theistic evolution being taught in schools over creationism but it doesn't hurt if all major viewpoints are considered. Topics like these should be discussed in religion classes instead.

Freedom06
11-27-2006, 07:28 PM
The Discovery Institute is bad news... we seem to follow america in most trends but I hope this stuff stays well out of the science class, I'm glad the government has made that clear..by all means distribute the packs in religion class.

annihilation
11-27-2006, 09:07 PM
I feel sorry for you guys. This **** is spreading across the pond.

NSX-R
11-27-2006, 10:32 PM
Good grief....

These retards are here now. What next is science lessons:

Teacher: This is how nuclear energy works. Plutonium goes into a nuclear reactor...Then a miracle occurs!! And out comes electricity....Praise the lord!!!

Science is science.


I have yet to hear a religious figure disprove Newton's three laws of classical mechanics using the Ten Commandments. ;) The only parts of science that Christian fundamentalists argue against is the theory of evolution in biology and the Big Bang theory (both tied up with Creationism). There are zillions of topics in chemistry, physics, and mathematics that are hardly in dispute with religion, probably because they're too abstract for most people to understand. So breath a deep sigh of relief because it's barely a religious war on science.