Social Uprooting

Social Uprooting

quantumaniac:

Tennessee Passes Bill Targeting Science Education 
After the US Supreme Court’s 1987 decision forbidding the teaching of creationism in science classes, those who objected to the teaching of evolution modified their ideas slightly. They relabeled these ideas “Intelligent Design.” In the wake of that tactic’s defeat in the courts, the opponents of science education retooled again.
This time, they targeted a number of state legislatures with two categories of bills that shared nearly identical wording. This tactic saw success in Louisiana, although a number of similar bills were considered in other states. They’ve now achieved their second success—the passage of a law in Tennessee.
One approach to diluting science education was a series of bills that allowed schools to use supplementary materials in science classes; conveniently, the anti-evolution Discovery Institute published a supplementary text at about the same time.
An alternate approach has appeared in a number of bills (again, all with nearly identical language) that would protect teachers who present the “strengths and weaknesses” of scientific theories, although the bills single out evolution, climate change, and a couple of topics that aren’t even theories. Again, the goal seems to be to use neutral language that will allow teachers to reiterate many of the spurious arguments against the widely accepted scientific understandings. Tennessee’s House and Senate had passed a bill that took precisely this approach.
The state’s governor, saying the bill doesn’t “bring clarity,” has decided not to sign it. But he’s decided not to veto it either, which will allow it to become law.
Although a detailed discussion of open issues within all scientific theories might make some pedagogic sense, the bill will undoubtedly function as its designers intended. Teachers with a strong agenda will be able to bring up discredited arguments against the mainstream scientific understanding. And, should they ever do that in front of a student from a family with equally strong views, the result will inevitably be a lawsuit that will hold the local school district responsible.
Source

quantumaniac:

Tennessee Passes Bill Targeting Science Education 

After the US Supreme Court’s 1987 decision forbidding the teaching of creationism in science classes, those who objected to the teaching of evolution modified their ideas slightly. They relabeled these ideas “Intelligent Design.” In the wake of that tactic’s defeat in the courts, the opponents of science education retooled again.

This time, they targeted a number of state legislatures with two categories of bills that shared nearly identical wording. This tactic saw success in Louisiana, although a number of similar bills were considered in other states. They’ve now achieved their second success—the passage of a law in Tennessee.

One approach to diluting science education was a series of bills that allowed schools to use supplementary materials in science classes; conveniently, the anti-evolution Discovery Institute published a supplementary text at about the same time.

An alternate approach has appeared in a number of bills (again, all with nearly identical language) that would protect teachers who present the “strengths and weaknesses” of scientific theories, although the bills single out evolution, climate change, and a couple of topics that aren’t even theories. Again, the goal seems to be to use neutral language that will allow teachers to reiterate many of the spurious arguments against the widely accepted scientific understandings. Tennessee’s House and Senate had passed a bill that took precisely this approach.

The state’s governor, saying the bill doesn’t “bring clarity,” has decided not to sign it. But he’s decided not to veto it either, which will allow it to become law.

Although a detailed discussion of open issues within all scientific theories might make some pedagogic sense, the bill will undoubtedly function as its designers intended. Teachers with a strong agenda will be able to bring up discredited arguments against the mainstream scientific understanding. And, should they ever do that in front of a student from a family with equally strong views, the result will inevitably be a lawsuit that will hold the local school district responsible.

Source

(via amodernmanifesto)

Source quantumaniac

Reblogged from Quantumaniac

Notes

  1. conscioushomo reblogged this from bradleyk7
  2. bonitoboy reblogged this from thescienceofreality and added:
    God I hate them
  3. bradleyk7 reblogged this from socialuprooting
  4. biowithdylan reblogged this from bushidotumbles and added:
    “Evolution is a fairy tale for grown-ups!” Oh but God isn’t a fairy tale? How the hell does that one work?
  5. tayman reblogged this from amodernmanifesto
  6. this-is-somestuff reblogged this from thescienceofreality and added:
    I’m so disappointed in them.
  7. nosce-hostem reblogged this from socialuprooting
  8. bookkeeperamanda reblogged this from socialuprooting
  9. ameondine reblogged this from socialuprooting and added:
    Oh man, the stupid, it hurts…
  10. biognosis reblogged this from socialuprooting
  11. cadolicious reblogged this from socialuprooting and added:
    Maddening article of the day.
  12. swindontownswoodilypooper reblogged this from thescienceofreality and added:
    fucking shit, this makes me so angry.
  13. princess-fluffybutt reblogged this from socialuprooting
  14. thecircusisintown reblogged this from socialuprooting
  15. dmd666 reblogged this from socialuprooting and added:
    The stupid are in high places.
  16. thelandbeforegrime reblogged this from socialuprooting
  17. apollo-black reblogged this from amodernmanifesto
  18. bushidotumbles reblogged this from quantumaniac
  19. socialuprooting reblogged this from amodernmanifesto
  20. thescienceofreality reblogged this from amodernmanifesto
  21. gingerche reblogged this from amodernmanifesto and added:
    Why do I still live here?
  22. amodernmanifesto reblogged this from elodiedreams
  23. elodiedreams reblogged this from quantumaniac
  24. xsuninmymouthx reblogged this from quantumaniac
  25. deerie reblogged this from quantumaniac
  26. bparramosqueda reblogged this from quantumaniac
  27. pinkkeith reblogged this from sandynet and added:
    I like how the car says “evolution is a fairy tale for grown-ups”. The person has a very strange definition of “fairy...
  28. scienceitworksbitches reblogged this from quantumaniac
  29. cthulhucore reblogged this from quantumaniac and added:
    Can we please just wipe...idiot country off
  30. exit200 reblogged this from quantumaniac