More on the sad state of US education

In summary, human evolution is included in the National Science Education Standards and the Benchmarks for Science Literacy, but politics often override its inclusion in state-level science education. Only 8% of state science standards include human evolution, and even the evolution of the universe, solar system, and planet is not universally included. This can lead to a lack of understanding and acceptance of evolution among students, particularly in rural areas where education systems are in need of improvement. While some believe a brief overview of evolution is enough, others argue that it can be easily misunderstood and lead to misconceptions.
  • #1
franznietzsche
1,504
6
Human evolution is included in the National Science Education Standards and the Benchmarks for Science Literacy, our national statements of the fundamental science concepts for grades K-12. The Standards and Benchmarks describe the basics for scientifically literate citizens. At the state level, politics overtake science education. Human evolution is included in only 8% of the state science standards, and is therefore not required in almost all American elementary, middle or high school science courses. ("The Emphasis Given to Evolution in State Science Standards: A lever for Change in Evolution Education?" Gerald Skoog, Kimberly Bilica, 2002) The evolution of the universe, our solar system, and our planet fare somewhat better, but still do not appear in almost half of the states’ science standards. These standards drive the content of textbooks and state achievement tests, and learning about evolution is getting left out.

http://www.space.com/searchforlife/seti_devore_evolution_050210.html

This is really bad, worse than i knew.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
To be fair, evolution is pretty damn complicated. A brief overview in grades K-12 may not be enough to convince those who are deeply rooted in religious beliefs.
 
  • #3
Icebreaker said:
To be fair, evolution is pretty damn complicated. A brief overview in grades K-12 may not be enough to convince those who are deeply rooted in religious beliefs.


Its not very complicated. The idea itself is very simple. If you can teach mendel's methods for cross-breeding plants and mendel squares, then evolution is not too complicated. (Granted, the same schools that don't teach evolution probably don't teach Mendel either)

Now if you mean, the students simply won't believe it, well there is nothing we can do about that. But the subject should still be taught. I've known people in high school who called the idea of evolution "stupid". Of course they also thought catholics worshipped Mary before god, which is also bull****. Loony born agains and knowledge never mix well.
 
  • #4
franznietzsche said:
Its not very complicated. The idea itself is very simple. If you can teach mendel's methods for cross-breeding plants and mendel squares, then evolution is not too complicated. (Granted, the same schools that don't teach evolution probably don't teach Mendel either)
I agree - I don't think it requires more than a day (45 min to an hour) of treatment in high school biology. Spend 15 minutes describing how Darwin came up with it, 15 minutes on improvements/discoveries since then, and 15 minutes on the controversy.

I'd add to Evolution, QM and Relativity. Once again, you can't get a very deep understanding in an hour, but it would be useful to give a taste. I remember doing an e=mc^2 calculation in chemistry, but we discussed none of the implications of it and didn't mention the rest of the theory. We also did a double-slit experiment in physics, but never mentioned its implications - imagine the shock a person gets when hearing for the first time that the double-slit works with particles with mass!
 
  • #5
franznietzsche said:
Its not very complicated. The idea itself is very simple. If you can teach mendel's methods for cross-breeding plants and mendel squares, then evolution is not too complicated. (Granted, the same schools that don't teach evolution probably don't teach Mendel either)

Now if you mean, the students simply won't believe it, well there is nothing we can do about that. But the subject should still be taught. I've known people in high school who called the idea of evolution "stupid". Of course they also thought catholics worshipped Mary before god, which is also bull****. Loony born agains and knowledge never mix well.

You mean people still believe man was created by god and not evolved from pre-existing organisms!
 
  • #6
chound said:
You mean people still believe man was created by god and not evolved from pre-existing organisms!


Those two are not necessarily exclusive.

Further: Yeah, it came as a shock. And an annoyance at the time. She was kinda cute.
 
  • #7
franznietzsche said:
She was kinda cute.
<derailment> Who ? </derailment>
 
  • #8
Gokul43201 said:
<derailment> Who ? </derailment>


The fundamentalist who thought the idea of evolution was outright "stupid". As she kept talking, i lost interest faster and faster.
 
  • #9
Most of this can be seen in smaller schools. At my old school, which I spent freshmen year of HS at, they taught evolution. However, being a small town with more churches than gas stations you came out feeling that it was an absurdity. The subject was taught as if it were wrong. I then moved to a bigger school which taught evolution rather well.

Rural America's education system is in desperate need of improvement.
 
  • #10
Zach_C said:
Rural America's education system is in desperate need of improvement.


Correction:

Rural America is in desperate need of an education system.
 
  • #11
russ_watters said:
I agree - I don't think it requires more than a day (45 min to an hour) of treatment in high school biology. Spend 15 minutes describing how Darwin came up with it, 15 minutes on improvements/discoveries since then, and 15 minutes on the controversy.

I don't agree with this. That's just enough time to give them enough for the Creationists to convince them it's all nonsense because of all the things that weren't explained.

However, one thing that time is wasted on and that inevitably winds up confusing students is teaching Lamarckian evolution. It's taught to give context to what preceded Darwinian evolution, but is quite often misunderstood and students end up thinking Lamarckian evolution is what happens. There's no need for that in high school biology, and it can be saved for college if students want to study it in more depth.

I honestly have mixed feelings about teaching evolution in high schools. While it is important to biology and not teaching it leaves the general public susceptible to Creationist teaching, not enough teachers know it well enough to get it right themselves, so end up teaching the same misconceptions they learned, which isn't at all helpful. A good portion of the time teaching evolution at the college level is spent on undoing misconceptions the students brought with them from high school. I preferred teaching it to the students who hadn't learned it in high school, because they didn't have to unlearn wrong stuff to learn the right stuff.
 
  • #12
Moonbear said:
not enough teachers know it well enough to get it right themselves, so end up teaching the same misconceptions they learned, which isn't at all helpful.


Thats a problem in all subjects in high schools. Again, that's a large part of the abysmal failure that is public education in this country.
 
  • #13
School boards in pretty much every state of the US are dealing with (or have recently dealt with) the creation-evolution debate thanks to well-funded creationist organizations. Frequent news updates available here...
http://www.ncseweb.org/default.asp

Seems like recent hotspots are Georgia, Kansas, Ohio, & Texas.
 
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  • #14
TBN's point of view

I watched some Trinity Broadcasting TV tonight. There was a program on evolution. Ray Comfort and Kirk Cameron talked about why they believe evolution is a farce.

A TV camera was taken to some public place, and questions about evolution were asked to (randomly chosen?) people who appeared to be roughly college age. After asking if the person believes in evolution, and getting an affirmative, they asked things like, "When the first creature came out of the sea onto the land, did it have gills or lungs? Was it male or female? Was there air for it to breathe?" The people they were interviewing gave a shot at providing answers, but for the most part the answers were far from convincing. (I am sure I would do poorly if a camera was pointing at me for an impromptu interview on this topic!)

They asked one guy, "What made the Big Bang?" I don't know if he was deliberately being humorous when he answered, "An asteroid hit a planet." I am not sure if the hosts of the program think there was no Big Bang, or whether they allow that there might have been, but that God made it happen. I tend to think the former is more likely, since the hosts hinted that science may well be getting the age of the universe all wrong. (A hypothetical situation involving a passenger jet that is about to crash, which may be an "old" aircraft according to one passenger, or a "young" aircraft according to another, was something they seemed to be using to illustrate this point, though I was distracted at that part of the program and didn't really catch the point of that illustration.)

They did interview a long-haired fellow who was identified (if I caught it right) as a biology major. In the very brief part of that interview that they showed, he did a nice job of fielding their questions. But they got him to admit on the issue of biogenesis: “The problem we have is with the beginning.” They played that back in a tape loop for dramatic effect: "Theproblemwehaveiswiththebeginning.Theproblemwehaveis..."

Other claims made on the program: They’re finding a huge gap in the fossil record. They don’t find these transitional forms. There’s not just one missing link, there’s thousands. The truth is they are not missing at all--they never existed. What about those science teachers' drawings of an apelike creature walking left to right across the page and turning into a modern human? The truth is there are no "missing links" because in fact there is nothing to connect apes and humans--except in the minds of those wanting to justify their theory of evolution.

They quoted Gould saying something about like this: "The dirty little trade secret of paleontology is that so many forms that should be in the fossil record are missing." I have heard the Gould quote more than once, and I suspect he really did write it.

They asked whether the fact that a jet and a biplane both have wings and engines mean that jets evolved from biplane. "No... God used a similar blueprint when creating features of men and apes," was the point they were illustrating.

They phoned some airlines, to ask if “a relative” could go on a flight-- a chimp. No, animals are not allowed except in the cargo hold, they were told, thus proving that chimps are animals and humans are not animals, I reckon.

Another point they made: Primates such as an orangutan cannot reason or invent.

To show that Darwin was a bad guy, they quoted him writing that man has evolved higher than woman in imagination, reason, and deep thought. Darwin was both sexist and racist, they pointed out. (I have heard Rev. James Kennedy say the same thing on his radio broadcast, I think.)

They quoted several scientists saying evolution is implausible, or even a joke.

They didn't make a believer in creationism out of me, but they did a pretty effective job of showing that when people say they "believe in" evolution without being prepared to answer detailed questions about evolution, they can be made to look like they are dupes of scientists and their naturalist (read "godless") agenda.
 
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  • #15
Janitor said:
yhey did a pretty effective job of showing that when people say they "believe in" evolution without being prepared to answer detailed questions about evolution, they can be made to look like they are dupes of scientists and their naturalist (read "godless") agenda.

Kind of like creationists are for their priests?
 
  • #16
franznietzsche said:
Kind of like creationists are for their priests?
are you pissy tonight or what?
russ_waters said:
We also did a double-slit experiment in physics, but never mentioned its implications - imagine the shock a person gets when hearing for the first time that the double-slit works with particles with mass!
it's what got me interested in physics. still blows me away, wish I would have learned it earlier
 
  • #17
Janitor said:
I watched some Trinity Broadcasting TV tonight. There was a program on evolution. Ray Comfort and Kirk Cameron talked about why they believe evolution is a farce.

Is that the same Kirk Cameron from Growing Pains and The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes? Is that guy still alive?
 
  • #18
if you googled Kirk Cameron to come up with the computer wore tennis shoes this is funny
if you knew Kirk Cameron was in the computer wore tennis shoes it is sad.
 
  • #19
tribdog said:
are you pissy tonight or what?

Nah, i just can't stand bible thumpers.


Being religious is fine. Being dogmatic isn't.
 
  • #20
tribdog said:
if you googled Kirk Cameron to come up with the computer wore tennis shoes this is funny
if you knew Kirk Cameron was in the computer wore tennis shoes it is sad.

Come on. I never actually saw that movie; I just have a good memory for advertisements for whatever reason.
 
  • #21
franznietzsche said:
Being religious is fine. Being dogmatic isn't.
I'm tribdogmatic
 
  • #22
tribdog said:
I'm tribdogmatic


That is just as bad. Excepts its only bad for you not for your offspring too, because, well, you already know that.
 
  • #23
loseyourname said:
Is that the same Kirk Cameron from Growing Pains and The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes? Is that guy still alive?

Yep. I haven't seen the latter, but I will vouch for the former being the show he was on 15 years ago or thereabouts. "Mike Seaver"--was that his character's name?
 
  • #24
Was that his name? c'mon you aren't fooling us. Jason, Maggie, Mike, Carol and Ben oh and little Chrissy. Admit you love them all.
 
  • #25
I was going to say "Tom Seaver," but then I remembered he was the pitcher in the Mets-Orioles World Series about 30 years ago.
 
  • #26
Janitor said:
I was going to say "Tom Seaver," but then I remembered he was the pitcher in the Mets-Orioles World Series about 30 years ago.


Now that is sad.

Everyone knows baseball fans aren't real.
 

Related to More on the sad state of US education

1. What are the main issues with the current state of US education?

The main issues with the current state of US education include inadequate funding, lack of resources and technology, high dropout rates, and achievement gaps among different demographic groups.

2. How does the US education system compare to other countries?

The US education system ranks lower than many other developed countries in terms of overall academic performance and student outcomes. Additionally, there are significant disparities in education quality and opportunities within the US itself.

3. What impact does poverty have on education in the US?

Poverty has a major impact on education in the US, as it often leads to inadequate resources, underfunded schools, and lower academic achievement. Students from low-income families also face challenges such as food insecurity, lack of access to healthcare, and unstable home environments, which can directly affect their ability to learn and succeed in school.

4. How does the US education system address diversity and inclusion?

The US education system has made efforts to address diversity and inclusion through policies such as desegregation, affirmative action, and inclusive education programs. However, there are still significant disparities in educational opportunities and outcomes for marginalized groups, particularly students of color and those from low-income backgrounds.

5. What can be done to improve the state of US education?

To improve the state of US education, there needs to be a focus on addressing systemic issues such as funding disparities, teacher shortages, and inequities in resources and opportunities. Additionally, there should be efforts to promote diversity and inclusion in education and provide support for students from marginalized backgrounds. Investing in early childhood education and providing comprehensive support for students and families can also lead to long-term improvements in the education system.

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