http://www.avpress.com/n/23/0323_s3.hts
Board OKs Darwin challenge
By CHRISTOPHER AMICO 
Valley Press Staff Writer
LANCASTER - The Lancaster School District board of trustees voted to
implement a "philosophy" of science instruction that encourages
students to question Charles Darwin's theory of evolution and that
permits science teachers to insert critiques of the long-standing and
accepted scientific theory into the curriculum.

The new statement, updated from an older document, does not include any
alternative theories such as "intelligent design," which posits a
master plan or master "designer" as an explanation of how the universe
began. Outside groups quickly pounced on the move as a way of sneaking
creationism - or a divine explanation - in the back door of the
classroom.

Alex Branning, a 22-year-old entrepreneur who owns a Web design and
marketing firm based in Lancaster, first proposed the changes at a
school board meeting two weeks ago.

He told trustees it was "imperative" that the school district update
its stand on the teaching of evolution as soon as possible. Teaching
the theory of evolution enters California's curriculum in seventh
grade.

Victory came sooner than Branning expected. All five trustees voiced
support for the amended statement, which members of the administration
worked with Branning to revise.

"We owe it to our students to give them a world-class science education
that prepares them as scientifically literate citizens and members of
the work force in the 21st century. Our proposed policy is designed to
do just that," Branning said recently when he was pursuing adoption of
the new standard.

He said the policy adopted by the school board Tuesday night will give
students the "thinking skills" needed to compete in today's economy.

Trustee Mel Kleven said the new philosophy will bring "scientific
reality to the classroom" and promote an "open environment."

Critics, however, questioned the motives in Lancaster's approach to
science instruction.

"You don't do students a favor by pretending there are controversies in
the scientific community where there are none," said Kevin Padian, a
professor of integrative biology at the University of California,
Berkeley.

California Schools Superintendent Jack O'Connell said by telephone that
schools should follow the state's standards on evolution.

"We want information that's based upon accepted scientific theory. We
need to have that info that's accepted by the mainstream scientific
community," he said, adding that a discussion of beliefs may be more
appropriate in a philosophy class rather than a science class.

"If it's a back door attempt at promoting creationism or 'intelligent
design' if that's being portrayed as gospel, that would be incorrect in
a science class," O'Connell said. "That would not be helpful."

Branning insists he is not anti-evolution and does not endorse teaching
creationism or "intelligent design." He said the group he founded,
called Integrity in Academics, includes others who, like himself, want
the whole picture of the origins of life shown to students.

Branning grew up in Quartz Hill and was home-schooled. He attended
Antelope Valley College and has run his business, the Branning Group,
for three years. He became interested in the controversy over evolution
after conducting his own research, reading what he described as
arguments for the theory, and challenges to it.

The businessman said he makes no claim to possessing a formal
scientific background.

One problem with evolution, he said, is the Cambrian Explosion, a
period he said has yet to be explained by modern biology or
paleontology.

During that early period of Earth's history - about half a billion
years ago - the ancestors of most modern animal phyla first appeared.

Questioners of evolution often describe this period as "sudden," but
Padian of UC Berkeley said that scientists consider that view
misleading. The period described actually took about 70 million years,
he said.

"It's usually misrepresented by anti-evolutionists," he said. "The
notion that this stuff appeared all at once is completely wrong."

Branning's push for a re-thinking of how to teach evolution locally
comes at a moment of renewed debate over life's origins.

The Discovery Institute, a Seattle-based advocacy organization, has
pushed intelligent design as an alternative to Darwin's theory, and
other groups have raised questions about supposed gaps in fossil
records.

Casey Luskin, an attorney with the institute, said Lancaster's new
board-approved philosophy on teaching will open up debate on a subject
that is usually one-sided.

Various attempts to introduce intelligent design as a scientifically
objective counter-theory to the theory of natural selection has been
consistently rebuffed by courts.

"Any time that you're permitting criticism, this is going to be good
for students. We definitely support the school district bringing
objectivity to science curriculum," he said. 

Luskin said Branning did not work directly with the Discovery
Institute, but one of his associates, Larry Caldwell, has worked with
the intelligent design group in the past.

Caldwell tried unsuccessfully to get a policy similar to the one
Branning proposed adopted in Roseville, near Sacramento. In a statement
issued on Branning's Web site, Caldwell praised Lancaster and
encouraged other districts to follow suit.

"Unfortunately, there is a kind of 'Taliban' in the scientific
establishment that seeks to suppress any criticism of Darwinism in the
classroom," Caldwell added. "It is refreshing to see school officials
willing to stand up against Darwinian fundamentalists to give their
students a science education rather than a science indoctrination.
After all, effective science education is all about teaching students
to ask meaningful questions and follow the evidence wherever it leads."

Howard Sundberg, Lancaster's assistant superintendent of educational
services, said the philosophy fits into California's established
framework for teaching science.

"If you're dealing in science, you're not dealing in a belief system,"
he said.

"Sure, kids can question things, but once you start crossing the line
into beliefs or religion, that's not something that's appropriate for
science."

Still, he believes students will benefit from probing what some see as
weaknesses in the theory.

"Those questions could help a theory to be understood," said Sundberg,
who crafted the final draft of the philosophy. "I just don't see any
bad that can come out of it, as long as we stay within the domain of
science."

While Sundberg's background is not in science, he advised teachers
faced with student questions to respect individual beliefs, but refer
questions of a religious bent to be directed to a social studies class,
or to parents or clergy.

Still, evolution's defenders say the philosophy looks like a
long-standing tactic aimed at "slinging mud" at Darwin's theory, long
accepted as bedrock science.

"It's a bad policy," said Glenn Branch, deputy director of the
Oakland-based National Center for Science Education. "The point of it,
of course, is to instill scientifically unwarranted doubts about
evolution."

"It's a fairly sophisticated approach because to most people it sounds
pretty reasonable," added Rob Boston, a spokesman for Americans United
for the Separation of Church and State.

"Evolution is the only thing they single out. It's not real critical
analysis. It's just an attack on evolution."

Branning wouldn't discuss his religious beliefs, saying his faith was a
private matter. He said he is on the fence about evolution and finds
credible arguments on both sides.

He is not, he insists, in favor of teaching creationism or intelligent
design in a science class.

"Those aren't scientific," he said.

And Branning does not worry about his group being infiltrated by those
who would promote alternatives to evolution.

"We keep those people out," he said. "While we appreciate the
encouraging words, we have different goals."

Branning said his next stop is the Los Angeles Unified School District,
the nation's second largest school system. He expects a bigger fight
there, but he remains confident he'll win.

"Thomas Edison, when he was inventing the light bulb, was told that he
couldn't do it," Branning said, "because that was the scientific
evidence of the day."

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