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Should evolution be taught in high school?

User picture for T Ryan Gregory

About T. Ryan Gregory

I am an evolutionary biologist specializing in genome size evolution at the University of Guelph in Guelph, Ontario, Canada. My scientific interests include evolution, genomes, and biodiversity.

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Genomicron

Evolution

Microbiologist Carl Woese is well known as an iconoclast. Indeed, few biologists have so thoroughly shaken the tree of life as he did when he proposed that there are not two major branches -- prokaryotes, whose cells lack nuclei, and eukaryotes who possess nuclei, including all animals, plants, fungi, and protists -- but rather three. "Prokaryotes", Woese argued, do not represent a cohesive category, and should be split into two deeply divergent lineages: the Bacteria, with which everyone is reasonably familiar, and the Archaea, superficially similar organisms that are less commonly encountered as many of them reside in extreme environments. What's more, studies of genetic data suggested that the Archaea are actually more closely related to eukaryotes -- including humans -- than they are to bacteria.

Three-domain tree

Woese's three-domain tree of life. From Wikimedia Commons.

At 79 years of age, Woese is still shaking things up. Most recently, he stated in an interview with Wired that,

My feeling is that evolution shouldn't be taught at the lower grades. You don't teach quantum mechanics in the grade schools. One has to be quite educated to work with these concepts; what they pass on as evolution in high schools is nothing but repetitious tripe that teachers don't understand.

Woese is no supporter of so-called "alternatives" to evolution, and has no patience for "any intrusion of religious ideas in the name of science". Rather, his point is that evolution -- the foundational principle of modern biology -- is too complex to be dealt with reliably at junior levels, and should be introduced at the college level where it can be addressed more appropriately.

Woese's proposal surely will raise the ire of many scientists and teachers alike. And while I disagree strongly with his conclusion, I am sympathetic to the frustration apparent in his premise.

In addition to carrying out research in genome evolution, I teach an upper-year university course in evolution. In that capacity, I interact predominantly with biology majors who have completed a minimum of two years of undergraduate education in the life sciences. This means that I can expect them to possess at least a working understanding of genetics, cell biology, anatomy, physiology, and ecology by the time they get to my course. I then have almost 30 hours of lecture time to explain the basics of evolutionary theory to them. I like to think that my students leave the course with a reasonable comprehension of evolutionary science, but when we part company at the end of the semester we all know that ours has been an exercise in surface-scratching at best.

In fact, much of my effort is devoted simply to clarifying serious misconceptions about evolution that these educated young adults inevitably bring with them to the class. Each semester, I fully expect many upper-year biology majors to be surprised to learn, among many other examples, that:

  • Humans are not descended from chimpanzees.
  • Scientific theories are well-supported explanations of scientific facts.
  • Individual organisms do not evolve in response to environmental challenges.
  • Animals do not do things for the good of their species.
  • Natural selection is the opposite of random chance.
  • Not every feature of an organism represents an adaptation.
  • Vestigial does not mean non-functional.
  • Modern frogs are not more closely related to modern fishes than mammals are.
  • There is no progressive pattern in evolution leading to humans as the pinnacle.
  • Although humans are now the only living members of the group, several species of hominids co-existed in the past.

My experience in this regard is not unique. In an article published in the scientific journal Evolution in 2002, Brian Alters and Craig Nelson noted that the issue of false preconceptions about evolution is a major barrier to understanding among students. Various studies show that students tend to misunderstand basic concepts such as natural selection and phylogenetic trees, and that this impacts their ability to correctly absorb new information about evolutionary biology.

Woese evidently believes that many of these misconceptions stem from the cursory or even inaccurate treatment of evolution at the high school level. His solution, as noted, is to leave evolution out of early education if it cannot be dealt with adequately, and to leave it to people like me to introduce the topic in a more advanced way to undergraduate students.

An obvious objection to this suggestion is that only a tiny minority of people will ever enroll in a university course in evolution. This means that most people would receive no education in the subject whatsoever and would instead develop their (mis)understanding of the topic based on what others tell them outside of an academic setting. In many cases, this would mean that their view of evolution would be instilled by anti-evolutionists, whose grasp of the science generally is non-existent. Of course, this is already far too common a condition -- and one for which a proper education is the only available antidote. Given how important evolutionary ideas are both in modern biology and in an increasingly broad spectrum of socio-economically relevant applications from combating pathogens to conserving biodiversity, a policy of intentional ignorance is not only academically irresponsible, it is dangerous.

Evolution is undoubtedly a special case in light of the (non-scientific) controversy surrounding its accuracy as an explanation for the diversity of life, but it is not entirely alone. Physicists have also noted that basic concepts in their field are often poorly understood among incoming students. For example, it has been shown that many students maintain the more intuitive views of motion proposed by Aristotle rather than the accurate interpretation provided by Newton, sometimes even after an attempt has been made to correct these misconceptions. This would not be an argument for removing basic physics education from high school, it would indicate that additional effort should be spent on clarifying such misunderstandings as early as possible. So it goes for evolutionary biology.

High school teachers have an opportunity to exert a profound influence on how well their students understand the world around them. Scientists have a responsibility to help them do so. Fortunately, more and more bridges are being built across the divide between scientists and teachers. Examples include the newly developed journal Evolution: Education and Outreach, the outstanding Understanding Evolution web resource from the University of California Museum of Paleontology, and numerous free publications from the National Academy of Sciences.

The problem of misconceptions about evolution is clear. However, omitting this critical component from junior education is no solution at all. What is needed is just the opposite: a renewed effort to properly convey some of the general ideas to students at a level that is both comprehensible and accurate. Time spent directly addressing and clarifying the most common misconceptions about evolution would be well invested, and would require no distorting simplifications of the topic.

If students could be liberated from entrenched misconceptions of humans descended from chimps, organisms changing to meet perceived needs, or complex organs arising by chance, then a good deal of progress will have been made.

 

Humans are not descended

Humans are not descended from chimpanzees

You may want to speak to Ken Miller about this?

Perhaps a good example of why I think my upcoming series may prove useful.

John Fiorentino

Fiorentino Research

John, please indicate where

John, please indicate where Dr. Miller says humans are descended from chimpanzees. Be sure he does not say the correct point, i.e., that we share a common ancestor with chimpanzees. This is why we need to teach the basics to students.

Be sure he does not say the

Be sure he does not say the correct point, i.e., that we share a common ancestor with chimpanzees.

Miller indeed said: ".....we share a common ancestor with the great apes, chimpanzees, gorillas and the orangutan"

That was my mistake after viewing the video late last night for the first time. I thought it was rather odd, but apparently in my sleepy perception, that is what came through.

Thanks for posting that.

John Fiorentino

Fiorentino Research

Hank wrote: Getting rid of

Hank wrote:

Getting rid of evolution in lower grades would get us back to science and make not a bit of difference in the quality of entry-level biology.

and Ryan responded

I don't know what you mean by that, but as worded I could not disagree more strongly.

I was going to leave a comment here but I used a last-in first-out comment system and you saw the short version there first.

There are two reasons:

First, I don't think the quality of high school evolution education is all that great. What teacher is not stumped by the most basic of objections, primarily because there's no way to make it simple enough?

I think this leads students down a bad path of skepticism that's unfounded. I had the usual skimming of biology - zoology, botany, genetics, etc. and didn't have any real grounding in evolution per sé and I think I was fine without it. To a young person, explaining why a missing link is unnecessary is a difficult thing. Anyone taking even a basic course in genetics, though, has evolution follow naturally from it.

Second, I am not sure the controversy is worth it. There are a few people who are just anti-science zealots, of course, and they can be dismissed. We certainly would never cede scientific ground to them just to shut them up. But there is a whole subset of American culture (and it's obvious why, given the history of America) who see evolution as being a government education fiat. A mandate. And a lot of Americans really dislike government mandates. To the rest of us, data is data and evolution stands on its own without the mandates.

In Canada you have a different culture. You came into existence more quietly and were not populated by government outcasts. Heck, it was 20 years ago you asked for permission to change your constitution to not have to ask permission to do things and you still keep the Queen on your money - that's pretty quiet about government interference. In Canada, there is no controversy about this.

Do you think a solid education in biology that doesn't get into the nuances of evolution will result in lesser quality biology students reaching the college level? It's not like biology education was non-existent before 1925.

You're in the education business, of course, so in my mind you have more votes than I do on the issue, but that's where my thinking is. In all the noise of a controversy that needn't exist, we seem to be educating high school students politically more than we are scientifically ( on evolution - in physics, we can drop things on them and show that gravity works).

I know you disagree with Woese but you don't say why. If we can't do it properly (in high school) then why not stick with what we can do properly, like genetics and zoology, etc. ?

First, I don't think the

First, I don't think the quality of high school evolution education is all that great. What teacher is not stumped by the most basic of objections, primarily because there's no way to make it simple enough?

No one is disagreeing that what is taught is insufficient. I made that point in my post. It does not follow that we should stop trying to improve the situation. My argument is that scientists should help teachers to better comprehend the topic, and the emphasis should be on clarifying misconceptions at that level.

I know you disagree with Woese but you don't say why. If we can't do it properly (in high school) then why not stick with what we can do properly, like genetics and zoology, etc. ?

I think I addressed this in the post. Most people won't take an advanced course, which means they will not understand even the basics. You may be an exception, but a single person does not a dataset make. What we need to do is to confront and correct misconceptions, as our own Mr. Fiorentino has kindly illustrated this above. The problem, as much as anything, is that people think they understand the subject when they don't. This is true right up to biology majors in Canada, and it starts because misunderstandings aren't dealt with early on. As I said, the same happens in physics where misconceptions brought to the classroom remain unless they are confronted. The earlier this happens, the more effective it can be.

As to this all being a holdover from the American revolution versus Canadian submissiveness, je n'ai pas besoin de cette hypothèse.

As to this all being a

As to this all being a holdover from the American revolution versus Canadian submissiveness, je n'ai pas besoin de cette hypothèse.

I would never be dumb enough to argue with Laplace!

However, not considering the culture we are talking about, be it Canadian, Japanese, American, whatever, is to miss the opportunity to most effectively deal with it.

I don't go to Japan and do things the American way. Any number of failed businesspeople have tried that.

I think reducing things to

I think reducing things to cultural vestiges of revolution is simplistic in the extreme. For one thing, there is no "American" attitude about evolution, nor a "Canadian" one. Both countries are diverse. Moreover, there are many differences between the USA and Canada (and western Europe, where acceptance of evolution is ever higher), including what gets taught in schools. Have you considered that perhaps many Americans reject evolution because they don't understand it? If they think scientists suggest that eyes arose by chance, or that a human was born of a chimp, then I can see why they would reject it. Those are two misconceptions that could be corrected readily at the high school level or even earlier.

Trying to teach a good high

Trying to teach a good high school biology curriculum without evolution would be as bad as trying to teach high school chemistry without mentioning protons, neutrons, and electrons. To take just one narrow example of a key field in modern biology: comparative genomics.

This is a really active field right now, important for understanding our own genomes, and high school students can profitably be taught about it. But it will make no sense without evolution - how do you get kids to understand the scientific merit of sequencing lots of genomes without teaching them about evolution?

And good high school biology curricula are not out of reach - Ken Miller's own high school textbook is very good. If you teach evolution the way it is presented in there, you give students a solid grounding without introducing a lot of confusion. You can't separate it out from the rest of biology. In physics, maybe we don't teach kids about the Schroedinger equation or matrix mechanics, but we do teach them about electrons, orbitals, and nuclei. The same thing applies in biology; we won't teach them hard-core population genetics, but kids can still learn profitably about phylogenetic trees, natural selection, genetic drift, etc.

Oh sure, team up on the guy

Oh sure, team up on the guy with the B.S.

But you both make some fine points. Still, if it's that fundamental (staying Newtonian, gravity is easy to demonstrate and any dumb jock can understand a coefficient of restitution when I throw a baseball at the wall) then why isn't it taught better?

We have what we have, educationally. How do we make it work? We can't hire all new teachers.

Both 'evolution' and 'mechanics' are part of the english lexicon. I see 'evolution' 10 times a day (give or take) in advertising and common speech so clearly everyone knows what it means. If an advertisement says "This is the next evolution in auto engineering" no one says they don't believe in cars so we clearly have a disconnect somewhere.

The main reason it's not

The main reason it's not taught better than, let's say physics, (meaning, let's leave the issue of poorly trained teachers out of this), is because it generates so much resistance. Poll after poll of teachers by organizations of teachers, or of biology teachers (I can't keep track of all the different organizations) show that a lot of teachers have avoided teaching evolution because they felt strong pressure from parents and administrators, who object on religious grounds, to avoid it.

If Newtonian physics had been subject to the same kinds of lawsuits and school board fights that evolution has experienced (just browse the 2007 news at NCSE for a sampling of the constant barrage), you can bet that it would be poorly taught as well. (And physicists would be just as fed up and frustrated as the biologists are.)

It will work once teachers can just teach, without backlash from parents and administrators, the kind of basic stuff that is in normal high school biology textbooks (the Miller and Levine book being a great example).

Both 'evolution' and

Both 'evolution' and 'mechanics' are part of the english lexicon. I see 'evolution' 10 times a day (give or take) in advertising and common speech so clearly everyone knows what it means. If an advertisement says "This is the next evolution in auto engineering" no one says they don't believe in cars so we clearly have a disconnect somewhere.

This is part of the point -- people do not understand evolution. Your example is a prime example of this: "the next evolution in..." badly misconstrues what evolution actually is. And advertisers can do this only because that misconception has not been corrected. Since most people won't take university science, the chance to do it is in grade school. I'm not talking about advanced evolution -- as I said, I don't even get into much advanced material in 30 hours of upper-year university lectures. How do we improve the situation? By improving teacher understanding with help of scientists, and focusing on understanding basic aspects and clarifying misconceptions rather than listing trivia that people do not see as relevant. It isn't just a problem for evolution, it applies to all sciences, but it is especially significant for evolution because, as you noted, the ideas are (mis)used frequently.

You and Mike both make

You and Mike both make interesting points I hadn't considered. Surely there are no lawsuits over teaching gravity and if that neuters evolution teaching it's a very bad thing. Public school teachers are in a union in the US - unless they run down a kid in the parking lot they can't be fired - so I assumed they had a little more independence and fortitude about how they taught.

I also thought having evolution as part of the lexicon was a benefit. If even I am unclear on what it is and isn't because of common misperception - and I have read a few biology articles in the last year - the problem is deep.

The disconnect, and we

The disconnect, and we certainly do have one extends beyond the bounds of the traditional educational system itself. As an example Miller in his talk said:

We in science "suck" at getting our message across to the public. We are terrible popularizers.

Miller asked:

"How many people in the audience were aware of the discovery of the "fusion" of human chromosome #2?

He also stated some of the reasons he felt those in science were not partcularly good communicators on this subject, among them he mentioned "self-absorption" and the "self-destructive tendency" to look down on "popularizers."

Among the popularizers he mentioned was Carl Sagan.

I also think some employ a rather heavy-handed approach when they indicate that essentially the idea that someone (a layman) might be actually able to offer something constructive after 150 years of study by scientists is ludicrous.

First, I can provide specific examples of laypeople who have done just that in other areas of science,(I will include myself in there) and I also think that train of thought doesn't sit well with what is done here at SB on a daily basis.

John Fiorentino

Fiorentino Research

And let me just reply to my

And let me just reply to my own reply and offer just two examples where "laymen" have not only assisted but directly contradicted the professional scientists and have been shown to be correct.

1 is my friend Steve Barber who demonstrated beyond any doubt that the PhD scientists (3 of them) who studied the Dallas Police dictabelt of purported "gunshots" relating to the JFK case were essentially all wet. Steve assisted the NAS in their review of that tape.

And, I am proud to say, my own rebuttal to be published in the peer-reviewed Annals of Applied Statistics relating to the NAA analysis, also in the JFK case.

I took on a gaggle of PhD's and also demonstrated rather conclusively, that their "paper" was more "poopie" than science.

So, it can be done, and indeed has been done.

John Fiorentino

Fiorentino Research

John, professional

John, professional scientific research is not the same thing as routine (or even non-routine) forensics. Do you seriously believe that a layman, who doesn't even know what a tensor is, is going to find some undiscovered flaw in General Relativity? Or that someone who does not know the difference between a synonymous and non-synonymous mutation is going to come up with a better interpretation of the DNA data than current ideas about human-chimp speciation?

Scientists get heavy-handed when confronted with the same bone-headed ideas from one self-described genius after another who thinks that, without any background knowledge whatsoever, he has overturned a field that thousands of undergrads every year struggle to learn in difficult classes. The fact that you, without second guessing yourself, thought you heard Ken Miller say humans descended from chimps shows that you really have not had enough exposure to the field to avoid really, really basic mistakes.

It's not about who's smarter, or who has more degrees. It's about whether you put in the mental effort to at least understand the sophsticated claims mainstream scientists are making before you go off and show them how mistaken they are.

The fact that you, without

The fact that you, without second guessing yourself, thought you heard Ken Miller say humans descended from chimps shows that you really have not had enough exposure to the field to avoid really, really basic mistakes.

First, this is very disingenuous. Frankly Dr. I know and knew last night that the theory of evolution does not indicate we descended from chimps. My problem was one of perception, (as indicated) and not knowledge. I made a mistake. Have you ever done that? I also admitted it, Have you ever done THAT?

And I'll state this for the record, and frankly don't give a rats patoot if you like it.

Your own ability to read and comprehend what is being said, at least in my experience with you is sorely lacking.

As to the rest of your mush, I think it's just that.

John Fiorentino

Fiorentino Research

I don't think that comment

I don't think that comment is taking us all to a good place.

I don't either. And Dr.

I don't either. And Dr. White's comments are?

John Fiorentino

Fiorentino Research

And, it would appear that

And, it would appear that Dr. White feels the science of acoustics and also neutron activation analysis are not areas of "scientific research."

He also likes to insult:

It's about whether you put in the mental effort to at least understand the sophsticated claims mainstream scientists are making before you go off and show them how mistaken they are.

Inferring of course that this is either my failing, or my intent.

Gee, Dr. and I was going to ask you to comment and assist me with my series..........how unfortunate.

Why don't you wait until you see what I have to say before you criticize it?

That's the way professionals do things.

John Fiorentino

Fiorentino Research

Actually, I think Ryan's

Actually, I think Ryan's example of Newtonian physics is even better than my proton/electron example. Unlike quantum mechanics, that's a subject you can treat somewhat quantitatively in high school, and it's a tricky subject, easily subject to misunderstanding. But it forms a core part of the physics curriculum - you wouldn't have much physics left to teach in high school if you left out Newtonian mechanics.

It's not really my example,

It's not really my example, nor a hypothetical one. See for example,

Halloun, I.A. and D. Hestenes. 1985. The initial knowledge state of college physics students. American Journal of Physics 53: 1043-1055.

Halloun, I.A. and D. Hestenes. 1985. Common sense concepts about motion. American Journal of Physics 53: 1056-1065.

Just as an aside, I saw this

Just as an aside, I saw this commentary on another site.

In taking a look at the rest of his site, he seems to fall into the rather classic striation I've seen in the last few years - conservatives and christians versus liberals and atheists. I don't remember this kind of faction mentality when I was in college(*). There was no evolution 'controversy.'

These are strange bedfellows to me. In American political thought, conservatives claim they believe in individuality and liberals seem to believe that society is better served in groups working toward a common good.

What's more anti-government than evolution? I very much doubt Reagan did not believe in evolution. He even said he evolved from Democrat to Republican.  :)

(*) Which does not mean it didn't exist. In trying to research this I found this fascinating timeline of teaching evolution in Time magazine.  

You can point to any subject

You can point to any subject and say that children will not fully understand it. You start out slow and simple and build on it. You don't (usually) try to teach writing until kids can talk, and you can't fully teach evolution without a lot of incremental education about biology. But you can introduce the concept early and add to it.
Also, the fact that there is opposition to teaching evolution on religious grounds is no reason not to teach it. The only way to combat ignorance is by education.
scott

Please be advised that

Please be advised that rambling nonsense comments will be deleted. It is not censorship, it is quality control. Any reasonable commentary, pro or con, is of course welcome here.

Thank you!

Thank you!

Well said!

Well said!

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