Kansas votes to restore evolution in school standards
February 14, 2001
Web posted at: 4:56 PM EST (2156 GMT)
Education News Archive
TOPEKA, Kansas (CNN) -- Reversing a
controversial 1999 move, the Kansas
Board of Education voted Wednesday to
restore the theory of evolution to state
school standards.
The 7-3 decision came in the wake of November
elections that saw three board members
ousted after voting to remove Charles
Darwin's theory of the origin of mankind
from public school science standards and allowing alternative theories to be
taught.
"There is no doubt that we are strengthening science by our action," said board
member Sue Gamble, one of those elected last year.
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The 1999 vote never banned the teaching of
evolution nor did it require the teaching of the biblical
story of creation. But it dropped Darwin's theory
from standardized tests taken by Kansas students.
Board members who favored keeping the 1999
standards argued that Wednesday's vote
discounted valid scientific doubts about
evolution.
"These standards are too restrictive in allowing only one view of man's origin to
be taught," board member John Bacon said.
Kansas Gov. Bill Graves called the 1999 vote an "embarrassment" to the state,
and it contributed to the defeat of three of its supporters on the state board. State
school districts were not bound by the decision, and most ignored it, board
members said -- with some stepping up their efforts to teach evolution in protest.
While much scientific evidence supports evolution, "A lot of it does not support
it," said Steve Abrams, the only anti-evolution board member to be re-elected last
fall. "And for us to say that we can't understand it, that we can't believe it, that
we have to rely on the so-called experts, that's passing the buck."
But several among the board's majority said alternative theories of mankind's
origin fell under the purview of religion, not science.
"We actually restored the basic definition of what science did," Gamble said. "It
is the investigation of the natural world. It is not the investigation of the
supernatural world."
Added board member Janet Waugh: "I don't want my children's biology teacher
talking about religion."
The controversy is unlikely to die anytime soon. At a public forum in Topeka on
Tuesday, more than a dozen people came forward to speak against evolution and
the new science standards.
Bacon predicted after the vote that the issue would end up in court, but Abrams
said he thought the matter was settled -- at least for four years, when Kansas
takes up its education standards again.
"I think I will be borne out. When that occurs, I won't expect groveling -- but a
simple apology will be all right," he joked after the vote.
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