Kansas approves teaching of evolution
TOPEKA, Kan. - Evolution was restored yesterday as
a central theory in the state's science classes, ending 18 months of debate
and international ridicule over how Kansas teaches the origins of man.
The state Board of Education approved the new science standards in
a 7-3 vote.
"I believe now that we have science standards that the rest of the
world could look to," board member Carol Rupe said.
The new standards will replace ones adopted in 1999 that omitted
references to many evolutionary concepts as well as the big-bang theory
of the creation of the universe.
Board member Steve Abrams voted against the new standards, arguing
that evolution is a flawed theory and that he isn't espousing any religious
doctrine in questioning its teaching.
"What I do espouse is that this is not good science," Abrams said.
Evolution, a theory developed by Charles Darwin and others, holds
that the Earth is billions of years old and that all life, including humans,
evolved from simple forms through a process of natural selection.
Some religious fundamentalists and others object to the teaching
of evolution, saying it contradicts the biblical account of creation.
The Kansas board caused an uproar two years ago when it voted 6-4
in favor of science standards that removed evolution from its central
place in the teaching of biology.
At the time, Gov. Bill Graves called the board's action "terrible,
tragic, embarrassing."
Harvard professor Stephen Jay Gould equated the Kansas standards
to teaching "American history without Lincoln." Bill Nye, the "Science
Guy" of children's television, called the board's action "harebrained"
and "nutty." And a Washington Post columnist wrote a facetious memo from
God to board members, with God saying, "Man, I gave a brain. Use it, OK?"
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