|
02.14.06
ACLU Demands Schools Halt Teaching of
Intelligent Design
TOLEDO, OH– Today, the ACLU of Ohio sent a letter to the Toledo
Public Schools demanding that they cease allowing staff to teach
intelligent design in public classrooms throughout the district.
ACLU of Ohio Legal Director Jeffrey Gamso said, “Intelligent design has
been proven to be nothing more than a thin cover for those who wish to
teach creationism, an idea of human origins endorsed by certain
Christian denominations, in science classes.”
Gamso went on, “Proponents of intelligent design have been unable to
provide any credible scientific evidence to support their theories. The
scientific community has, time and again, largely refuted purported
evidence supporting intelligent design.
By continuing to allow teachers to implement intelligent design into the
science curriculum, educators are misinforming Ohio’s children on the
fundamental principles of science.”
Recently, a news article running in the Toledo Blade interviewed
teachers in the Toledo Public School system who admitted teaching
intelligent design in science classrooms. In the article, teachers
acknowledged they taught lessons on various pieces of evidence that
seemed to refute evolutionary theory, despite the fact that all were
proven to be hoaxes by the scientific community.
The battle over intelligent design in Ohio schools began in 2002 when
the State Board of Education endorsed teaching “critical analysis of
evolution,” which is no more than a way of slipping intelligent design,
and therefore creationism, into the public schools through the back
door.
Following a decision in Dover, Pennsylvania in late 2005 that ruled
against the Dover School Board’s decision to teach intelligent design,
many in Ohio called for the State Board of Education to reexamine their
science standards.
Gamso added, “As Ohio students compete with people from other states and
nations for jobs in science and technology, allowing the teaching of
intelligent design as a science standard will diminish their ability to
compete in the economy.”
Letter sent to Toledo Public Schools
|