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Texas Conservatives Demand Science Textbooks Incorporate 'Creation Science Based On Biblical Principles'
Submitted by Brian Tashman on Tuesday, 9/10/2013 12:20 pm
Creationists advising the Texas Education Agency, the states board of education, are no longer even trying to hide the fact that they want to insert pseudo-scientific material grounded in religious beliefs into public school science textbooks. Terrence Stutz of the Dallas Morning News reports that evolution detractors appointed to the review boards are urging the textbook publishers to ignore the Supreme Court (along with science) and push Creationism, or be rejected. One of the panelists reviewing the biology textbooks, a nutritionist, said that creation science based on biblical principles should be incorporated into every biology book that is up for adoption.
- See more at: http://www.rightwingwatch.org/content/texas-conservatives-demand-science-textbooks-incorporate-creation-science-based-biblical-pri#sthash.u3hHTugt.dpuf
(Can I make a remark about the nutritionist pushing woo?)
sharp_stick
(14,400 posts)talk about an oxymoron.
I feel so bad for teachers in Texas that actually want to teach the kids.
Then I feel damned good that I'm not trying to raise my kids in Texas.
Downwinder
(12,869 posts)if your kids are using texts written for Texas' approval.
TlalocW
(15,382 posts)Since Texas is one of the two or three largest buyer of text books, they have a lot of power in getting their agenda into them, and since the manufacturers don't want to have to make Texas and non-Texas versions, they put out the Texas ones.
As much as I like real books, etc. I look forward to the day when digital books are the norm in our schools. It will then be easier for the saner states to say that they don't want the Texas BS so the textbook reps can then sell licenses for X number of the file NonTexasBiology.pdf (or whatever file extension) for that state's students. If Texas wants to keep getting TexasBiologyMyths.pdf and fall behind everyone else, that's their prerogative. Hopefully, they'll be some wailing and gnashing of teeth by the Texas textbook boards that they're not able to affect what their neighboring states teach.
TlalocW
xfundy
(5,105 posts)teachers can tell the kids on the first day of class to tear out those pages, as Robin Williams' character did in Dead Poets' Society.
dixiegrrrrl
(60,010 posts)They will also have to agree to teaching their God based religion is nothing but a fairy tale.
Fair's fair.
sinkingfeeling
(51,457 posts)students?
snooper2
(30,151 posts)They are just following their holy book to the letter unlike most folks....
You don't just get to choose the happy parts to follow you are supposed to either believe it all or not.
TeamPooka
(24,226 posts)since they are science based places..
hootinholler
(26,449 posts)What if we adopt them all and raise them as freethinkers?
rickford66
(5,523 posts)shouldn't Sunday schools in churches have to teach evolution to keep their tax exemption????
hunter
(38,313 posts)The first few chapters really ought to be heavy on evolution, instead they tend isolate evolution in a single place where it can be skipped over by teachers and school districts who are uncomfortable with it.
"Nothing in Biology Makes Sense Except in the Light of Evolution" -- Theodosius Dobzhansky
That ought to be the the first sentence of every high school biology text and any student or parent who can't live with that should be asked to leave.
(I posted this in another thread earlier.)