Attention
lolleeroberts (and other Texans)
You thought the incoming classes were hard to teach before?
The Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board is considering certifying the Institute for Creation Research to offer Master's degrees in science education. If approved, some Texas schools will have science teachers whose qualifications are in Biblical creationism.
Source: Inside Higher Ed
(swiped from
dark_christian)
The Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board is considering certifying the Institute for Creation Research to offer Master's degrees in science education. If approved, some Texas schools will have science teachers whose qualifications are in Biblical creationism.
Source: Inside Higher Ed
(swiped from
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And given that a bunch of other universities are looking at instituting similar restrictions on what they'll accept as valid science courses in high school, the backlash should be *really* interesting.
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No, not in an allegorical sense. Yes, he was serious.
Head-desk, head-desk, head-desk.
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The fact that the UC refusal has survived several court challenges is likely why the others are going along.
Should be interesting to see what happens when the school boards and voters get their faces rubbed in the fact that good schools won't accept students who've been fed this crap instead of science.
ps, I assume you've heard that the Texas board of education fired the person in charge of science textbooks for daring to imply that evidence based science should be considered instead of ID?
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