Attack on Academic freedom in Louisiana
http://www.evolutionnews.org/2008/05/barbara_forrests_shameful_misi.html
Opponents of academic freedom in Louisiana have been putting out a smokescreen of misinformation in their effort to kill legislation to protect the rights of Louisianaâs science teachers. Rather than discuss the real issues at stake, they are trying to get their way through misrepresentations, scare tactics, and the demonization of those who support honest discussion of scientific controversies. Their misinformation campaign shouldnât be allowed to obscure key facts:
1. Louisianaâs academic freedom legislation is not about âcreationism.â Itâs about protecting the rights of teachers to teach good science.
Many teachers remain confused and fearful about what information they can legally teach regarding controversial scientific topics such as evolution. By enacting a limited right to objectively discuss conflicting scientific views in the classroom, proposed legislation would address this problem. Thus far, the main objection to protecting teacher rights in this area is the bogus claim that the legislation will somehow promote âcreationism.â Repeating the terms âcreationistâ and âcreationismâ ad nauseum, opponents of academic freedom clearly hope if they mention these words frequently enough they will stigmatize the legislation sufficiently to kill it. But their rhetoric ignores the actual language of the bills that have been proposed. The operative language of Sen. Neversâ bill merely requires educators to:
create and foster an environment within public elementary and secondary schools that promotes critical thinking skills, logical analysis, and open and objective discussion of scientific theories being studied including, but not limited to, evolution, the origins of life, global warming, and human cloning.1
The operative language of Rep. Hoffmanâs bill states:
teachers shall be permitted to help students understand, critically analyze, and review, in an objective manner, the scientific strengths and scientific weaknesses of existing scientific theories pertinent to the course being taught.2
Moreover, the bills expressly state that they shall âonly protect[t] the teaching of scientific informationâ (HB 1168) or only protect the rights of teachers âto help students understand, analyze, critique, and review scientific theories in an objective mannerâ (SB 733) and both bills expressly state that they âshall not be construed to promote any religious doctrine, promote discrimination for or against a particular set of religious beliefs, or promote discrimination for or against religion or non-religion.â (HB 1168 and SB 733) There is no way to legitimately interpret such clear statements as authorizing the teaching of creationism.
2. Louisianaâs academic freedom legislation is legally sound.
Opponents of academic freedom are also trying to mislead lawmakers by implying that an academic freedom bill including the subject of evolution would be struck down in the courts or end up in costly litigation. This is a standard scare tactic that has been employed in other states. Despite such threats, at least nine states currently have state or local policies that protect, encourage, and sometimes even require teachers to discuss the scientific evidence for and against Darwinian evolution:
Minnesotaâs science standards require that â[t]he student will be able to explain how scientific and technological innovations as well as new evidence can challenge portions of or entire accepted theories and models including... [the] theory of evolution....â3 No lawsuit has ever been filed there.
New Mexico requires that students will âcritically analyze the data and observations supporting the conclusion that the species living on Earth today are related by descent from the ancestral one-celled organisms.â4 No lawsuit has been filed there.
Pennsylvania requires that its students â[c]ritically evaluate the status of existing theories (e.g., germ theory of disease, wave theory of light, classification of subatomic particles, theory of evolution, epidemiology of aids).â5 This policy remains unchallenged.
Missouriâs statewide standards state that students must âdentify and analyze current theories that are being questioned, and compare them to new theories that have emerged to challenge older ones (e.g., Theory of Evolutionâ¦).â6 There has never been a lawsuit against this policy.
Alabama requires that a disclaimer be inserted into biology textbooks that says that âevolution by natural selection is a controversial theory. ... Instructional material associated with controversy should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered.â7 Darwinists have not dared to file a lawsuit even against this policy.
In South Carolina, students are required to âummarize ways that scientists use data from a variety of sources to investigate and critically analyze aspects of evolutionary theory.â8 Darwinists have realized they cannot sue against this policy.
Grantsburg, Wisconsin requires its students to âexplain the scientific strengths and weaknesses of evolutionary theory.â This policy has gone unchallenged in courts.
A school district in Lancaster, California also passed an academic freedom policy stating that evolution should not be treated as âunalterable factâ and that â[d]iscussions that question the theory may appropriate as long as they do not stray from current criteria of scientific fact, hypothesis, and theory.â9 No lawsuit has been filed against that policy.
Ouachita Parish, Louisiana has an academic freedom policy recognizing that âthe teaching of some scientific subjects, such as biological evolution, the chemical origins of life, global warming, and human cloning, can cause controversyâ and therefore provides that âteachers shall be permitted to help students understand, analyze, critique, and review in an objective manner the scientific strengths and weaknesses of existing scientific theories pertinent to the course being taught.â10 This policy is very similar to the present legislation active in the Louisiana Legislature, and it has gone unchallenged in courts.
Many of these policies go much further than the Louisiana Legislatureâs proposed academic freedom legislation, showing that even more demanding policies than the present modest proposals to protect academic freedom legislation are legally defensible. Indeed, what critics of academic freedom do not want lawmakers to know is that the law is firmly on the side of this legislation. The U.S. Supreme Court has made clear that it is permissible for schools to teach âscientific critiques of prevailing scientific theories,â11 and even groups like the ACLU and Americans United for the Separation of Church and State have had to acknowledge that âany genuinely scientific evidence for or against any explanation of life may be taught.â12
3. Louisianaâs academic freedom legislation is not preempted by Kitzmiller v. Dover.
One of the most disingenuous tactics adopted by the opponents of academic freedom is their claim that legislation on this issue is preempted by the widely-reported decision in the case of Kitzmiller v. Dover in 2005. In reality, the Dover case is completely inapplicable to the academic freedom legislation under consideration in Louisiana:
First, and most important, the Dover case was about intelligent design, not studying the strengths and weaknesses of existing scientific theories. The proposed legislation in Louisiana does not address the teaching of alternative scientific theories such as intelligent design. It merely protects critical thinking and discussion regarding existing scientific theories in the curriculum.
Second, the Dover case focused on teacher mandates, not on academic freedom policies. The Dover school board required teachers to mention intelligent design in the classroom. By contrast, the proposed academic freedom legislation in Louisiana does not mandate that any teacher teach anything. Itâs purely defensive and protective: It protects the jobs of teachers who choose to teach the scientific evidence for and against evolution in the classroom. It essentially says to teachers: âyou wonât lose your job for teaching legitimate science for or against evolution.â
Finally, the Dover case has no binding authority over the State of Louisiana. It was decided in the lowest level of the federal courtsâover a thousand miles away in a federal trial court in the middle district of Pennsylvaniaâand it therefore does not represent the law in Louisiana. Since the case was never appealed to a higher court, it is not binding precedent upon parties outside of those involved in that lawsuit.
Continued in part 2
http://www.evolutionnews.org/2008/05/barbara_forrests_shameful_misi.html
Opponents of academic freedom in Louisiana have been putting out a smokescreen of misinformation in their effort to kill legislation to protect the rights of Louisianaâs science teachers. Rather than discuss the real issues at stake, they are trying to get their way through misrepresentations, scare tactics, and the demonization of those who support honest discussion of scientific controversies. Their misinformation campaign shouldnât be allowed to obscure key facts:
1. Louisianaâs academic freedom legislation is not about âcreationism.â Itâs about protecting the rights of teachers to teach good science.
Many teachers remain confused and fearful about what information they can legally teach regarding controversial scientific topics such as evolution. By enacting a limited right to objectively discuss conflicting scientific views in the classroom, proposed legislation would address this problem. Thus far, the main objection to protecting teacher rights in this area is the bogus claim that the legislation will somehow promote âcreationism.â Repeating the terms âcreationistâ and âcreationismâ ad nauseum, opponents of academic freedom clearly hope if they mention these words frequently enough they will stigmatize the legislation sufficiently to kill it. But their rhetoric ignores the actual language of the bills that have been proposed. The operative language of Sen. Neversâ bill merely requires educators to:
create and foster an environment within public elementary and secondary schools that promotes critical thinking skills, logical analysis, and open and objective discussion of scientific theories being studied including, but not limited to, evolution, the origins of life, global warming, and human cloning.1
The operative language of Rep. Hoffmanâs bill states:
teachers shall be permitted to help students understand, critically analyze, and review, in an objective manner, the scientific strengths and scientific weaknesses of existing scientific theories pertinent to the course being taught.2
Moreover, the bills expressly state that they shall âonly protect[t] the teaching of scientific informationâ (HB 1168) or only protect the rights of teachers âto help students understand, analyze, critique, and review scientific theories in an objective mannerâ (SB 733) and both bills expressly state that they âshall not be construed to promote any religious doctrine, promote discrimination for or against a particular set of religious beliefs, or promote discrimination for or against religion or non-religion.â (HB 1168 and SB 733) There is no way to legitimately interpret such clear statements as authorizing the teaching of creationism.
2. Louisianaâs academic freedom legislation is legally sound.
Opponents of academic freedom are also trying to mislead lawmakers by implying that an academic freedom bill including the subject of evolution would be struck down in the courts or end up in costly litigation. This is a standard scare tactic that has been employed in other states. Despite such threats, at least nine states currently have state or local policies that protect, encourage, and sometimes even require teachers to discuss the scientific evidence for and against Darwinian evolution:
Minnesotaâs science standards require that â[t]he student will be able to explain how scientific and technological innovations as well as new evidence can challenge portions of or entire accepted theories and models including... [the] theory of evolution....â3 No lawsuit has ever been filed there.
New Mexico requires that students will âcritically analyze the data and observations supporting the conclusion that the species living on Earth today are related by descent from the ancestral one-celled organisms.â4 No lawsuit has been filed there.
Pennsylvania requires that its students â[c]ritically evaluate the status of existing theories (e.g., germ theory of disease, wave theory of light, classification of subatomic particles, theory of evolution, epidemiology of aids).â5 This policy remains unchallenged.
Missouriâs statewide standards state that students must âdentify and analyze current theories that are being questioned, and compare them to new theories that have emerged to challenge older ones (e.g., Theory of Evolutionâ¦).â6 There has never been a lawsuit against this policy.
Alabama requires that a disclaimer be inserted into biology textbooks that says that âevolution by natural selection is a controversial theory. ... Instructional material associated with controversy should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered.â7 Darwinists have not dared to file a lawsuit even against this policy.
In South Carolina, students are required to â
Grantsburg, Wisconsin requires its students to âexplain the scientific strengths and weaknesses of evolutionary theory.â This policy has gone unchallenged in courts.
A school district in Lancaster, California also passed an academic freedom policy stating that evolution should not be treated as âunalterable factâ and that â[d]iscussions that question the theory may appropriate as long as they do not stray from current criteria of scientific fact, hypothesis, and theory.â9 No lawsuit has been filed against that policy.
Ouachita Parish, Louisiana has an academic freedom policy recognizing that âthe teaching of some scientific subjects, such as biological evolution, the chemical origins of life, global warming, and human cloning, can cause controversyâ and therefore provides that âteachers shall be permitted to help students understand, analyze, critique, and review in an objective manner the scientific strengths and weaknesses of existing scientific theories pertinent to the course being taught.â10 This policy is very similar to the present legislation active in the Louisiana Legislature, and it has gone unchallenged in courts.
Many of these policies go much further than the Louisiana Legislatureâs proposed academic freedom legislation, showing that even more demanding policies than the present modest proposals to protect academic freedom legislation are legally defensible. Indeed, what critics of academic freedom do not want lawmakers to know is that the law is firmly on the side of this legislation. The U.S. Supreme Court has made clear that it is permissible for schools to teach âscientific critiques of prevailing scientific theories,â11 and even groups like the ACLU and Americans United for the Separation of Church and State have had to acknowledge that âany genuinely scientific evidence for or against any explanation of life may be taught.â12
3. Louisianaâs academic freedom legislation is not preempted by Kitzmiller v. Dover.
One of the most disingenuous tactics adopted by the opponents of academic freedom is their claim that legislation on this issue is preempted by the widely-reported decision in the case of Kitzmiller v. Dover in 2005. In reality, the Dover case is completely inapplicable to the academic freedom legislation under consideration in Louisiana:
First, and most important, the Dover case was about intelligent design, not studying the strengths and weaknesses of existing scientific theories. The proposed legislation in Louisiana does not address the teaching of alternative scientific theories such as intelligent design. It merely protects critical thinking and discussion regarding existing scientific theories in the curriculum.
Second, the Dover case focused on teacher mandates, not on academic freedom policies. The Dover school board required teachers to mention intelligent design in the classroom. By contrast, the proposed academic freedom legislation in Louisiana does not mandate that any teacher teach anything. Itâs purely defensive and protective: It protects the jobs of teachers who choose to teach the scientific evidence for and against evolution in the classroom. It essentially says to teachers: âyou wonât lose your job for teaching legitimate science for or against evolution.â
Finally, the Dover case has no binding authority over the State of Louisiana. It was decided in the lowest level of the federal courtsâover a thousand miles away in a federal trial court in the middle district of Pennsylvaniaâand it therefore does not represent the law in Louisiana. Since the case was never appealed to a higher court, it is not binding precedent upon parties outside of those involved in that lawsuit.
Continued in part 2