You might consider sending them to the alt.talk.origins site and have them read and present on articles there:

http://www.talkorigins.org/

Or have them just analyze the FAQ there:

http://www.talkorigins.org/origins/faqs-qa.html

I'd say it's even more reliable than wikipedia.

Paul Smith
Alverno College
Milwaukee

On 12/27/05, Jean-Marc Perreault <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Greetings all,
             I have found in the past that the Theory of Evolution is not
well understood by most of my students (1st year psych.). I seem to give the
theory as much time as I possibly can in an already overloaded course,
without the students really grasping the importance of the theory. Luckily,
they haven't heard of ID either, so that's more than half the battle won I
guess!

        So I am on the lookout for a good article or book chapter that I
could distribute to these students in order to give them a solid foundation
on the theory. If anyone has a good source that would be accessible to first
year students, I would be very interested in hearing about it!

Hope you all had a Merry Christmas (Holiday).

Cheers!

Jean-Marc



Jean-Marc Perreault
Instructor, Psychology
Yukon college
Whitehorse, Yukon
(867)-668-8867


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