It’s only been nine decades since the Scopes Monkey Trial; I suppose I shouldn’t be too surprised that Texas is weighing whether to bring creationism into public school science classes.
As we discussed over the weekend, Texas’ Board of Education is in the process of reviewing new biology textbooks, which at face value, wouldn’t be especially noteworthy. The problem, however, is that the state board appointed a variety of creationists to conduct the review, and they “very firmly” believe that “‘creation science’ based on Biblical principles should be incorporated into every Biology book that is up for adoption.”
The first public hearing on the science curriculum was yesterday, and the debate is off to a lively start.
A past Texas State Board of Education chairman and outspoken creationist urged his former colleagues on Tuesday to approve high school biology textbooks he said would “strike a final blow to the teaching of evolution.”
Appearing at a board hearing on new instructional materials, Don McLeroy, a Bryan dentist who lost his seat on the SBOE in the 2010 Republican primary, told board members that the science textbooks currently under consideration contained many “hidden gems just waiting to be mined by inquisitive students” that proved there was no evidence for evolution.
Oh my.









