What Parents Involved in the Dover Intelligent Design Challenge Have to Say (11/23/2005)
"Intelligent Design" is a religious view, not a scientific theory,
according to U.S. District Judge John E. Jones III in his historic decision
in Kitzmiller
v. Dover. The lawsuit was brought by the
parents who objected to the decision by the school board in Dover,
Pennsylvania, to promote teaching intelligent design in their children's
public school. Here are their stories.
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| Tammy Kitzmiller |
TAMMY KITZMILLER
As a parent, I chose to take a stand for a sound science education
for my child. Each year the US science and math scores fall further behind
the rest of the world. ID, introduced as a 'scientific' explanation, would
only increase that gap. I've always encouraged my children to explore new ideas,
try new things, to think outside of the box. But at the same time, I've stressed
the importance of education and having a firm knowledge of the basics. To have
a school muddy the waters of science - when within the scientific community
there is no controversy - left me greatly disappointed. When and where my children
learn about theological ideas should be my decision, not the Dover Area School
Board's. BETH EVELAND
The Dover Area School Board's efforts to introduce
Intelligent Design in the science classroom are wrong. The
events that took place leading up to the school board's
decision to include ID in their science curriculum lead
me to believe they were motivated by their own particular
religious beliefs, rather than a desire to enhance the education
of our students. The school board wants us to believe that
ID is science; yet none of the board members introducing
this concept had formal training in science. In fact, the
scientific community has serious problems with ID, particularly
because there is no way to test ID using the scientific
method. The introduction of ID in the science classroom
has only muddied the waters for much needed, true scientific
education.
For me, this lawsuit is not about squelching the free flow
of information, but about putting religion and science in
the appropriate curriculum. Members of the Dover community,
including teachers, clergy and parents have asked for ID
to be introduced in the appropriate forum only to be denied
by the school board. I would like nothing better than to
see the Dover Area School District practice religious pluralism.
What better way to prepare our students for life in a global,
religiously diverse society than to talk about the concept
that all religions are legitimate and valid - when viewed
from within their particular culture.
STEVEN STOUGH
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| Steven Stough |
I
have joined this lawsuit because I believe that religious
education is a personal matter whose instructional component
is best reserved for home or at a church of one's choice.
It is my responsibility for the direction of my daughter's
religious instruction not
the public high school.
My daughter is a ninth-grade student who attends Dover High
School in the Dover Area School District. She is currently
enrolled in the required ninth-grade biology class at Dover
High School. In January 2006, she will be exposed to the implementation
of the biology curriculum revision of October 18, 2004, which
requires an administrator to read a statement in her class
that implies that intelligent design has standing in the
discipline of science equal to Theory of Evolution. Intelligent
design is neither a theory nor is it scientific. Intelligent
design claims that a divine or supreme being is responsible
for the appearance of life on earth. As a result, intelligent
design is inherently religious and has no place in science
instruction in the public schools.
BRYAN REHM
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| Bryan Rehm |
As a parent and a person of faith,
I want to share my religious beliefs with my own children.
But as a high school physics teacher, I believe it would
be a great disservice and fallacy to teach students
that a perfectly valid faith constitutes scientific knowledge.
JOEL LEIB AND DEBORAH FENIMORE
Since faith is
very personal, families instead of schools should be the ones
to discuss this subject. I have no problem with teaching Creationism
in a comparative religion class, which includes all faiths'
views of how we got here.
Any time an individual or group's personal, political, or
religious agenda interferes with my children's education and
ability to compete for jobs other than menial labor, I am
concerned. Not only does the introduction of this new curriculum
turn back the clock to the dark ages for education, it opens
the door to religious intolerance and the hatred that it will
ensue.
BARRIE
AND FRED CALLAHAN
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| Barrie and Fred Callahan |
We have joined this
lawsuit for two primary reasons. First, we believe
that the proponents of Intelligent Design have a clear
religious purpose, and while there may be appropriate
settings for religious discussions in public schools
such as comparative religion or philosophy courses, clearly
science education should be reserved for theories that
are supportable through the proven methods of scientific
discovery.
Secondly, introducing ID in conjunction with
the teaching of evolution places scientific instruction
on a slippery slope and is an unwarranted intrusion
that cannot help but corrupt that instruction. It casts
doubt where there should be none. While it gives comfort
to those that would stymie scientific discovery that conflicts
with their personal religious views, it does so at
the expense of those who are seeking, and entitled to, an
unobstructed view of proven science. At the same time,
it acts to intimidate educators from teaching what
has been proven, in an effort to avoid the conflict.
CYNTHIA
M. SNEATH
I fail to see how intelligent
design receives the prestigious
title of scientific theory. This relatively new concept
of creation science has not been accepted by our scientific
community, and cannot be tested using scientific method.
Yet the Dover school board has implemented this controversial
idea in the 9th grade biology curriculum, despite outcry
from parents, clergymen, science teachers, and science faculties
of local universities.
The Foundation for Thoughts and Ethics, the publisher
of the intelligent design reference book Of Pandas
and People , openly admits they are committed to providing
textbooks and curriculum that challenge the world-view of
naturalism. This can only be warranted on a religious level,
not a scientific one. There is no controversy among the
scientific community. Biology is the study of our natural
world, and evolution is a part of it that has withstood
the scrutiny of scientific method to become a well-accepted
scientific theory.
It is clear that the Dover school board members overstepped
their qualifications in making the curriculum change, and
acted instead to promote their own religious beliefs. I
firmly believe that this constant challenge to evolution
will result in a sub-standard science education for our
students.
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