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Points to Ponder about Ohio's Science Standards

  1. Ohio must adopt new science standards by Dec 31, 2002. A committee of scientists and educators has been hard at work for more than a year trying to draw up new standards that can be implemented in 2003. They are still revising the proposed standards, but the new draft will be available for public comment in April, 2002 on the Dept of Education website.

    Standards are important because they symbolize Ohio's committment to guaranteeing a quality education for all her children. The standards present a vision of what Ohio considers the bare minimum students should know to pass each grade. The 10th grade standards provide the basis for the required proficiency test necessary to graduate from Ohio high schools.

    Standards do not inhibit academic freedom. They set no limits on what teachers are permitted to teach. Rather, they make a statement about the minimum that must be covered each year. If it's in the standards, it must be covered. Local school districts and individual teachers are free to teach additional material. In fact, this is encouraged. But the additional material must not violate any other laws, such as statutes against pornography, local laws against inciting race hatred, or the constitutional separation of church and state. The standards merely constitute the lowest common denominator among educational experiences in Ohio.

    Analysis of SEAO's Proposed Changes

    The National Center for Science Education (NCSE), a non-profit group based in Oakland, Californina supporting quality science education, has done an analysis of the proposed changes offered by Science Excellence for All Ohioans (SEAO), a project of the American Family Association of Ohio. SEAO seeks to include "intelligent design" creationism in the newly drafted standards.

    NCSE's analysis is available in both html and PDF formats.

  2. A group called SEAO (an affiliate of the religious American Family Association) is trying to derail the process by eliminating references to evolution and watering down biology content.


  3. SEAO and other anti-evolution activists are making false claims that President Bush recently signed legislation that would force schools to teach Intelligent Design theory (also known as progressive creationisn or abrupt appearance theory) and other fringe beliefs in science classes. for more information on this see our Santorum "Amendment" page.


  4. Inspired by the creationists' false claims, Ohio legislators have introduced legislation that would require that the "full range of scientific views" be taught in Ohio's classrooms. These bills have been put on hold for the moment and will probably die in committee. However, it is worth pondering the implications of such language for science education in Ohio's K-12 classrooms:

    What would teachers have to teach if this "full range of scientific views" were interpreted to include material that sounds scientific, but has been rejected by the vast majority of scientists and does not have a significant presence in peer-reviewed journals? For example:

    • Would teachers be required to tell their students about J Phillippe Rushton's "scientific" views on the inferiority of Africans? Notice that, although promoters claim the work is scientific and even claim that it forms part of the evolutionary corpus, they publish in books, not peer-reviewed journals --just like Intelligent Design "theorists."


    • Would teachers be required to tell students about Cryptozoology, the "scientific" search for animals unknown to science, such as bigfoot, reptoids, and the Loch Ness monster? Like intelligent design creationists, promoters argue that if students are not taught to look for these possibilities, then they won't find them. OCS feels that valuable classroom time should be spent making sure Ohio's children consistently achieve a good understanding of the major theories and results of mainstream science.

      Cryptozoologists are heartened by the recent passage of the giant squid (Architeuthis) from the realm of myth into the realm of science. Ohio Citizens for Science is excited about the giant squid research, but cautions that this does not mean that all stories about undocumented animals are true. Now that Architeuthis has entered the scientific literature, it is a great subject for classroom discussion. Students can now discuss aspects of the squid's biology -its digestive, reproductive and visual systems. But prior to scientific documentation, the discussion could only have focussed on what we don't know - a topic with limited appeal for children and little applicability to future scientific projects.


    • Would teachers be required to cover premodern sciences that still have followings, like Alchemy and Astrology? These are tough because there is some peer-reviewed literature. Yet, much like intelligent design creationists, most enthusiasts are motivated by religious feeling, rather than strictly by the scientific allure of the results. Thus, inclusion of these could be challenged on establishment grounds.


Ohio Citizens for Science
Patricia Princehouse
Department of Biology
Case Western Reserve University
Cleveland, OH 44106
216-368-8585, patricia@case.edu