Wednesday, 22 August 2012

Creationism in the Classroom


Once again it has been a long time since writing anything – with a hectic work schedule, and seemingly never-ending higher education, I just can’t find the time anymore to express outrage and get all angry at stuff.   Add to that PlayStation 3, watching Breaking Bad and kowtowing to my wife and my life suddenly gets filled up – and my outlet becomes yelling at the television instead of expressing myself via the written word.

But I must take a second to address a story which appeared on Stuff regarding creationism in schools.

Not US schools, mind you, but New Zealand schools.  Creationism … taught by untrained and unqualified teachers.

How unqualified teacher is allowed to teach anything at all is beyond me, but an unqualified teacher teaching scientific principles – such as the origins of the Earth, humans and the universe – with a bent towards special creation is an appalling affront to New Zealand society and to our education system.

Creationism – the peculiar evangelical version as espousedby Charter School front man and cabbage boat fancier John Banks – has long been disproven and flies directly in the face of every scientific discipline.  Physics, geology, biology, genetics and archaeology (to name just a few fields) all confirm that the Earth is significantly older than the 6,000 or so years old that special creation demands based upon the biblical chronology of James Ussher.

To teach anything else is either to knowingly teach a lie or unknowingly teach a falsehood – in which case the person shouldn’t be teaching in the first place.
Creationism (as distinct from religious studies) as a factual alternative to the scientific consensus on the formation of the Earth and the life it houses has no place in the classroom and should only ever be taught as a historical curiosity.  It should never be taught as a scientific or logical precept and only leads to scientific illiteracy.

For a more thorough breakdown on why the Earth must be significantly older than creationism teaches, this website has a good list of arguments … Hell, they aren’t even ‘arguments’ – it’s established fact.

4 comments:

  1. I didn't like John Banks already, but I must say I didn't expect this.

    Still, it's heartening that this is even news.

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    1. Even while Banks was saying he wouldn't let his personal beliefs interfere with his portfolios, his charter schools certainly make it easy for those who agree with him to inflict said beliefs on children. Sneaky, very sneaky.

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  2. They can't be any worse that the bullshit children are already getting stuffed into their heads by the govt curriculum . . fake environmental religion (climate change) politicized versions of history, the mantra that there are certain groups in society who must under no circumstances ever be allowed to be offended (poofs, Muzzies & Maoris, for example), rolling condoms onto pieces of broom handle . . just to name a few, all taught by "trained" and "qualified" teachers (like James Parker).

    And as an added bonus, it annoys the fuck out of secular-progressives. So, bring it on Banks !!

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  3. As an atheist I must insist on secular education.

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