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On Tue, 06 Oct 2009 19:28:09 -0500, thunder
wrote: On Tue, 06 Oct 2009 17:45:57 -0400, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: Perhaps, if you include all creationist theories, not just the Christian one, the Greek Chaos, etc. If you limit yourself to one creation theory, you run right into the establishment clause of the First Amendment. Ok - fair enough. Let's take a hypothetical journey. You're a Middle School science teacher and as part of the biology section you teach the section on evolution. Two students, solid A honor roll types tell you that they believe in the New Earth model as part of their religious upbringing - that it is a tenant of their belief system. What do you do? These things do get tricky, don't they? As a school teacher it would be my job to teach evolution, not discourage their belief system. I would continue to teach evolution, but, I can't see any positive results from getting into a discussion of their religious tenants. Reasonable approach, but it doesn't solve the problem. They believe in something other than what is being taught. These are active and engaged students and directly challenge your presentation with what they believe to be true. What do you do? |
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