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paleonet BadNewsID



9 Nov 05, Some bad news from The York Dispatch this morning.  Some good 
news, I heard that the Dover school board was ousted in Penn.  I'll try 
to find that link.  Sally E. Walker

 From The York Dispatch:

Kansas schools panel favors intelligent design
New standards redefine word 'science' in class
JOHN HANNA The Associated Press

TOPEKA, Kan. -- Critics of evolution won a big victory in Kansas with 
the adoption of new public school standards that defy mainstream views 
on the mystery of mankind's origins.

The standards, approved yesterday by the state Board of Education, cast 
doubt on Darwinism and redefine the word "science" so that it's not 
limited to the search for natural explanations of phenomena.

The board's 6-4 vote was lauded by intelligent design advocates, who 
helped draft the standards. Intelligent design holds that the universe 
is so complex that it must have been created by a higher power.

But critics say intelligent design is merely creationism -- a literal 
reading of the Bible's story of creation -- camouflaged in scientific 
language, and it does not belong in a science curriculum. They worry 
that the vote will encourage attacks on evolution in other states.

"This action is likely to be the playbook for creationism for the next 
several years," said Eugenie Scott, director of the National Center for 
Science Education in Oakland, Calif. "We can predict this fight 
happening elsewhere."

Fresh criticism: The Kansas board's vote is likely to heap fresh 
national criticism on the state. In 1999, the board deleted most 
references to evolution in the science standards. That decision was 
overturned in 2001.

But supporters of the new regulations say they will lead to open 
discussions.

"We are being very brave. We are brave enough to have all areas 
discussed," said board member Kathy Martin, a Clay Center Republican. 
"Students will be informed and not indoctrinated."

The board does not mandate what will be taught to public school 
students; that decision is left to local school boards. However, it does 
determine what students are expected to know for state assessment tests. 
The new standards will be in effect starting in 2008.

Pressures: Some educators fear pressure will increase to teach less 
about evolution or more about creationism or intelligent design.

"What this does is open the door for teachers to bring creationist 
arguments into the classroom and point to the standards and say it's 
OK," said Jack Krebs, an Oskaloosa High School math teacher and vice 
president of Kansas Citizens for Science, which opposes the changes.

The new standards say high school students must understand major 
evolutionary concepts. But they also declare that the basic Darwinian 
theory -- that all life had a common origin and that natural chemical 
processes created the building blocks of life -- have been challenged in 
recent years by fossil evidence and molecular biology.

In addition, the board rewrote the definition of science, so that it is 
no longer limited to the search for natural explanations of phenomena.