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Intelligent Design the Future

Is Evolution Taught Fairly in Textbooks? A High School Senior Investigates

Intelligent Design the Future

Discovery Institute's Center for Science and Culture

Science, Philosophy, Astronomy, Society & Culture, Life Sciences

4993 Ratings

🗓️ 25 July 2023

⏱️ 25 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Has the accuracy of teaching on evolutionary theory improved in standard biology textbooks in recent years? On this ID The Future, host Daniel Reeves, Director of Education & Outreach at Discovery Institute’s Center for Science and Culture, speaks with a recent high school graduate named Natalie about her senior year research project. Natalie has had an interest in evolution and intelligent design for years, and she's noticed that textbooks don't always cover important or controversial topics fairly. So when she discovered her school was trialing a new biology textbook, she decided to evaluate the proposed textbook's approach to accuracy and fairness in light of the available scientific evidence. Focusing on the fossil record and genetics, Natalie organized quotations from the textbook into three categories - misrepresented, underdeveloped, or well-aligned - based on how well they conveyed the available evidence. From whale evolution to genetic differences among organisms, Natalie found that more often than not, the textbook was misleading to students in the way it presented or omitted important scientific ideas. "High school students are in such a pivotal time in their life because they're forming their worldview," says Natalie. "And evolution is a theory on the origin of life...that's huge to answering those questions." Natalie encourages her fellow students, and anyone interested in origins, to question and dive deep as they evaluate competing ideas. As biologist and Center for Science and Culture Senior Fellow Jonathan Wells puts it at the start of his latest book, Zombie Science, this book is "dedicated to the students who will need to discern the truth for themselves." Here's one young scholar who is doing just that. AN IMPORTANT NOTE In the interview, Natalie shares her personal view that intelligent design should be included in public school science classrooms. However, as a matter of public policy, Discovery Institute opposes any effort to require the teaching of intelligent design by school districts or state boards of education. Attempts to require teaching about intelligent design only politicize the theory and will hinder fair and open discussion of the merits of the theory among scholars and within the scientific community. Furthermore, most teachers at the present time do not know enough about intelligent design to teach about it accurately and objectively. Instead of recommending teaching about intelligent design in public K-12 schools, Discovery Institute seeks to increase the coverage of evolution in curriculum. It believes that evolution should be fully and completely presented to students, and they should learn more about evolutionary theory, including its unresolved issues. In other words, evolution should be taught as a scientific theory that is open to critical scrutiny, not as a sacred dogma that can’t be questioned. Read more of our recommendations for science curriculum here: https://www.discovery.org/a/3164/

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Transcript

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0:00.0

I D the future, a podcast about evolution and intelligent design.

0:12.4

Welcome to the program. My name is Daniel Reeves. I serve as the Director of Education Outreach

0:16.8

for Discovery Institute Center for Science and Culture and I'll be the host of today's episode

0:20.8

of ID the Future. Before I introduce our special guest today,

0:24.0

I wanted to remind our listeners about a book

0:26.5

that was published more than 20 years ago now,

0:29.4

but which remains no less relevant to today's discussion.

0:32.4

The book is entitled, I evolution, science or myth, why much of what we teach about evolution is wrong.

0:38.0

And it's authored by biologist Jonathan Wells back in 2002.

0:42.0

In this book he exposed many of the Jonathan Wells back in 2002.

0:42.8

In this book he exposed many of the exaggerated claims, sometimes even deceptions I would say,

0:48.6

they have persisted in discussions of biological origins for decades, despite evidence to the contrary.

0:54.0

If you haven't read it, you absolutely should.

0:56.0

And then if the findings presented in that book weren't shocking enough,

0:59.0

Dr. Wells released a follow-up book 15 years later in 2017, entitled zombie science, in which he convincingly

1:06.2

demonstrated that many of these, quote, icons of evolution continue to persist undaunted

1:11.4

or undead, you might say, in a long list of mainstream textbooks.

1:16.0

It's now been about eight years since zombie science and you may be wondering has anything changed?

1:21.6

Has the accuracy of teaching on evolutionary theory improved in standard

1:25.8

textbooks? Well, our guest today is a recent high school graduate by the name of Natalie,

1:30.9

and I've invited Natalie onto the program today because I think she has a unique

1:34.2

story to tell our listeners. Natalie first of all thanks for your willingness to jump on the

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