Paz-Y-Miño-C Guillermo, Espinosa Avelina
Department of Biology, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, 285 Old Westport Road, North Dartmouth, MA 02747-2300, USA.
Department of Biology, Roger Williams University, One Old Ferry Road, Bristol, RI 02809, USA.
Evolution (N Y). 2012 Mar;5(1):139-162. doi: 10.1007/s12052-011-0383-9. Epub 2012 Mar 6.
Acceptance of evolution by educators of prospective teachers remains superficially studied despite their role in having mentored schoolteachers whose weak support of evolution is known. Here, we contrast the views of New England educators of prospective teachers (=62; 87% Ph. D./doctorate holders in 32 specializations) with those of the general faculty (=244; 93% Ph.D./doctorate holders in 40 disciplines), both members of 35 colleges and universities, and with college students (=827; subsample of the 35 institutions) who were polled on: (1) the controversy evolution vs. creationism vs. intelligent design (ID), (2) their understanding of how science/evolution works, and (3) their religiosity. The educators held intermediate positions in respect to the general faculty and the students: 94% of the general faculty, 75% of the educators, and 63% of the students said they accepted evolution openly; and 82% of the general faculty, 71% of the educators, and 58% of the students thought that evolution is definitely true. Only 3% of the general faculty in comparison to 19% of the educators and 24% of the students thought that evolution and creationism are in harmony. Although 93% of the general faculty, educators, and students knew that evolution relies on common ancestry, 26% of the general faculty, 45% of the educators, and 35% of the students did not know that humans are apes. Remarkably, 15% of the general faculty, 32% of the educators, and 35% of the students believed, incorrectly, that the origin of the human mind cannot be explained by evolution; and 30% of the general faculty, 59% of the educators, and 75% of the students were Lamarckian (=believed in inheritance of acquired traits). For science education: 96% of the general faculty, 86% of the educators, and 71% of the students supported the exclusive teaching of evolution, while 4% of the general faculty, 14% of the educators, and 29% of the students favored equal time to evolution, creationism and ID; note that 92% of the general faculty, 82% of the educators, and 50% of the students perceived ID as either not scientific and proposed to counter evolution based on false claims or as religious doctrine consistent with creationism. The general faculty was the most knowledgeable about science/evolution and the least religious (science index, SI=2.49; evolution index, EI= 2.49; and religiosity index, RI=0.49); the educators reached lower science/evolution but higher religiosity indexes than the general faculty (SI=1.96, EI=1.96, and RI=0.83); and the students were the least knowledgeable about science/ evolution and the most religious (SI=1.80, EI=1.60, and RI=0.89). Understanding of science and evolution were inversely correlated with level of religiosity, and understanding of evolution increased with increasing science literacy. Interestingly, ≈36% of the general faculty, educators and students considered religion to be very important in their lives, and 17% of the general faculty, 34% of the educators, and 28% of the students said they prayed daily. Assessing the perception of evolution by educators of prospective teachers vs. the general faculty and the students of New England, one of the historically most progressive regions in the U.S., is crucial for determining the magnitude of the impact of creationism and ID on attitudes toward science, reason, and education in science.
尽管未来教师的教育工作者在指导对进化论支持不足的学校教师方面发挥着作用,但他们对进化论的接受程度仍缺乏深入研究。在此,我们对比了新英格兰地区未来教师的教育工作者(=62人;87%为32个专业的博士学位持有者)、普通教师(=244人;93%为40个学科的博士学位持有者)以及大学生(=827人;来自35所院校的子样本)的观点,这些人都接受了关于以下方面的调查:(1)进化论与神创论及智能设计论(ID)之间的争议;(2)他们对科学/进化如何运作的理解;(3)他们的宗教信仰程度。教育工作者在普通教师和学生之间持中间立场:94%的普通教师、75%的教育工作者以及63%的学生表示他们公开接受进化论;82%的普通教师、71%的教育工作者以及58%的学生认为进化论绝对正确。相比之下,只有3%的普通教师、19%的教育工作者以及24%的学生认为进化论与神创论是和谐一致的。尽管93%的普通教师、教育工作者和学生知道进化依赖于共同祖先,但26%的普通教师、45%的教育工作者以及35%的学生不知道人类是猿类。值得注意的是,15%的普通教师、32%的教育工作者以及35%的学生错误地认为人类思维的起源无法用进化论来解释;30%的普通教师、59%的教育工作者以及75%的学生是拉马克主义者(即相信获得性性状的遗传)。关于科学教育:96%的普通教师、86%的教育工作者以及71%的学生支持仅教授进化论,而4%的普通教师、14%的教育工作者以及29%的学生赞成给予进化论、神创论和智能设计论同等的教学时间;需要注意的是,92%的普通教师、82%的教育工作者以及50%的学生认为智能设计论要么不科学且基于错误主张来反对进化论,要么是与神创论一致的宗教教义。普通教师对科学/进化最为了解且宗教信仰程度最低(科学指数,SI = 2.49;进化指数,EI = 2.49;宗教信仰指数,RI = 0.49);教育工作者的科学/进化知识水平低于普通教师,但宗教信仰指数高于普通教师(SI = 1.96,EI = 1.96,RI = 0.83);而学生对科学/进化的了解最少且宗教信仰程度最高(SI = 1.80,EI = 1.60,RI = 0.89)。对科学和进化的理解与宗教信仰程度呈负相关,并且对进化的理解随着科学素养的提高而增加。有趣的是,约36%的普通教师、教育工作者和学生认为宗教在他们的生活中非常重要,17%的普通教师、34%的教育工作者以及28%的学生表示他们每天都祈祷。评估美国历史上最进步的地区之一新英格兰地区未来教师的教育工作者与普通教师及学生对进化论的看法,对于确定神创论和智能设计论对科学、理性以及科学教育态度的影响程度至关重要。