TwinCrier said:
While I respect that many people hold many different beliefs on the origin of man, I am stumped as to the hostility towards allowing discussion of creation in the education forum. As Im sure most evolutionists feel confident in their education and proofs of evolution, there is extreme hostility towards the idea of presenting creation as an equally valid theory. Just as many of you dont like having your position misrepresented, you can imagine the resentment one may feel at having their viewpoint totally shut out. Would you be opposed to the theory of YEC being presented as a possibility for mans beginning?
At first I was pulled between option 1 and option 3 as I am not strictly opposed to
mentioning literalist creation views.
But, as twin crier notes, I am definitely opposed to presenting creationism
as an equally valid theory.
Why? Because it is simply not an equally valid theory and should not be presented as such.
It is not that I doubt that evolution can stand on its own merits. I think we see here again and again that it does just that. But the proper role of a science teacher is to teach science, good science, and to teach students how to recognize and how to do good science. Especially in the earlier grades, we should not muddy the waters by presenting controversies instead of science.
There may be a place, there should be a place, for teaching students about controversies including the creation-evolution controversy. I think students need to be educated in debate, in good debate form, in recognizing proper and improper argumentation. And they need to be encouraged to do some thinking of their own, not just on this question, but other social and political controversies as well: abortion, capital punishment, going to war, etc. etc.
But that place is not the science classroom. It can be the history, English, communications or philosophy class. But not the science class, because creationism is simply not science. Period.