Evolution and religion: attitudes of Scottish first year biology and medical students to the teaching of evolutionary biology

Citation
Jr. Downie et Nj. Barron, Evolution and religion: attitudes of Scottish first year biology and medical students to the teaching of evolutionary biology, J BIOL EDUC, 34(3), 2000, pp. 139-146
Citations number
37
Categorie Soggetti
Biology
Journal title
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL EDUCATION
ISSN journal
00219266 → ACNP
Volume
34
Issue
3
Year of publication
2000
Pages
139 - 146
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-9266(200022)34:3<139:EARAOS>2.0.ZU;2-C
Abstract
Over a 12 year period, 4 - 11 per cent of a large first year Scottish unive rsity biology class stated that they rejected the occurrence of biological evolution. There was a slight, but statistically significant, decline in ev olution-rejection over the 12 years. In the one year surveyed, the figure f or medical students was 10 per cent. Most evolution-rejectors accepted the occurrence of within-species evolutionary changes: their objection was to t he origin of new species. Acceptance of a literal religious creation accoun t was the principal reason for rejecting evolution, whereas those accepting did so more on grounds of the lack of good alternative explanations, than on the strength of the evidence. Rejection of evolution correlated strongly with religious belief mainly various sorts of Christianity or Islam. Howev er, over half of those accepting evolution also claimed to have a religious faith. When asked to evaluate the evidence for various scientific proposit ions, including evolution, evolution-rejectors were generally a little more sceptical than accepters: the two groups differed most starkly on the evid ence for evolution and continental drift. These results are discussed in th e context of the very different public attitudes towards the teaching of ev olution in the USA and elsewhere, and of strategies in science education th at acknowledge the role of values and the nature of scientific evidence.