home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
- CALIFORNIA SCIENCE FRAMEWORK LIFTS MATERIAL FROM CREATIONIST BOOK──
- TYPOS AND ALL
-
-
- Colorado Springs, CO (October 3, 1990) -- Access Research Network
- (ARN), an organization recently established to make scientific knowledge
- accessible to the layperson, announced that it has discovered material
- from a creationist book in the California Science Framework.
-
- The California State Board of Education last week officially released its
- new science education guidelines, which it approved last November
- amidst bitter controversy over the document's treatment of evolution.
- Not long after the Framework's release, ARN announced its discovery
- that a table of figures in the Framework had been taken from the
- creationist book, Of Pandas and People, published in 1989. Mark
- Hartwig, ARN's executive director, said that the material from Pandas
- was discovered in a pre-release copy of the Framework. "While we
- were entering the figures into a computer for analysis," said Hartwig,
- "we discovered that some of the Framework's figures were wrong.
- Several numbers that should have matched up, didn't. We wanted to
- know what the right figures were, so we looked in Pandas, because we
- knew it had a similar table. And we found the exact same errors."
-
- Hartwig said that the ARN staff then hunted down the source from
- which both tables had supposedly been taken, the Atlas of Protein
- Sequence and Structure, by Margaret Dayhoff. But Dayhoff's Atlas had
- no errors. So Hartwig said that ARN staff were forced to conclude that
- the material had been lifted directly from Pandas.
-
- In Pandas, the table of figures was used to highlight problems that
- molecular biology poses for current evolutionary theory. In the
- Framework, the same figures are reproduced, but the claim is made
- that they fit perfectly with the theory of evolution.
-
- While there is nothing legally wrong with using the material from
- Pandas, Hartwig said the ARN staff was amused by their discovery.
- "Once we got over our initial surprise," said Hartwig, "we had to
- chuckle a bit. I mean, talk about a siege mentality. That little book
- must have really gotten somebody going. Otherwise, why would they
- have even bothered to address the issue?"
-
- Kevin Wirth, a Washington, D.C.-based director of ARN commented "We
- thought it was kind of interesting that the authors would actually take
- material from a book that some of them have publicly opposed."
-
- More disturbing, according to Hartwig, is that this recent discovery is
- only part of a much larger picture: "When you actually read the
- Framework, it doesn't take long to figure out that it's not simply a set
- of educational guidelines. It's also an anti-creationist tract──as well as
- a tool for keeping skeptics in their place. And that's why it generated
- so much controversy. It's very clear that a major purpose of this
- document was to disenfranchise those who hold conservative religious
- views. In fact, one of the Framework's authors has boasted that this
- is precisely what happened."
-
- Hartwig was referring to Berkeley paleontologist Kevin Padian, who, in
- an article for the National Center for Science Education Reports, wrote
- "As for the religious right itself, the new Science Framework leaves
- them totally disenfranchised from the public educational system in
- California."
-
- Access Research Network was established in response to the growing
- concern over scientific illiteracy in America. Its purpose is to bridge
- the gap between the world of science and the layperson; and to
- encourage a sound understanding of issues related to science,
- technology, and society.
-
- More information may be obtained by contacting Access Research
- Network, P.O. Box 38069, Colorado Springs, CO 80937-8069 (719)633-
- 1772.
-
-
- ***************************************
-
-
- Origins Talk RBBS * (314) 821-1078
-
- Missouri Association for Creation, Inc.
- 405 North Sappington Road
- Glendale, MO 63122-4729
- (314) 821-1234
-