An email
last week from the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (CFACT) and a story in
the Bluefield Daily Telegraph the
following morning noted that the West Virginia Board of Education voted to open
up state teaching standards so that students would be able to consider both
sides of a contemporary debate.
Say, what?
The state Board of Education had to have a special vote to allow more than one
side of a critical issue to be studied in West Virginia’s public schools? Well,
yes, more or less, since the Next Generation Science Standards that the BOE was
considering for adoption were worded such that global warming is settled
science, and therefore not a proper topic for debate.
During the
deliberations on the standards last December, the Charleston Gazette reported that BOE member Wade Linger requested
several changes be made to the standards prior to their being offered for
public comment, like this one: “There was a question in there that said: ‘Ask
questions to clarify evidence of the factors that have caused the rise in
global temperatures over the past century,” Mr. Linger was quoted as saying. “... If you have that as a standard, then that
presupposes that global temperatures have risen over the past century, and, of
course, there’s debate about that.” He suggested adding the words “and fall”
after “rise” to the sixth-grade science standard, and that change some others were
adopted.
Then the Gazette reported on January 14 that
following a period of public comment the BOE yielded to criticism from
“teachers, professors and others,” and withdrew the changes, and again opened a
period of public comment.
One
wonders exactly what “teachers, professors and others” fear from opening debate
on this topic, or any topic?
CFACT
reports that Executive Director Craig Rucker, and climate news and information
service editor Marc Morano, along with students from West Virginia University
and Marshall University who belong to CFACT Collegian chapters at the schools, all
testified before the Board.
On April 8 the Board voted to open up teaching standards to
permit students to consider both sides in the climate debate by a 6-2 vote.
CFACT reported that, “Supporters of the changes, including board members Wade
Linger and Tom Campbell, argued that ‘science is never settled’ and that debate
will lead students into a deeper understanding of the issue.”
Let’s
congratulate the state BOE for finally getting it right, and award special
kudos to Mr. Linger and Mr. Campbell for their leadership in blowing away the
dark clouds of censorship, and opening the way for contrary ideas to be voiced
and discussed. And let’s also acknowledge the efforts of CFACT and WVU and MU
students for taking a stand for openness in public education.
Some
issues are considered beyond debate, like that the Earth orbits the Sun and the
Moon orbits the Earth, that day follows night and night follows day, and that the
Earth is not flat. But that does not mean that there can’t be any discussion or
that some can’t reject those ideas if they so choose.
In the
early 1600s it was “settled science” that the Earth was the center of the
universe, a view held by virtually all scientists of the time and by the
Catholic Church, supported by Biblical references. Then came Galileo, a scientist
who professed heliocentrism – a sun-centered system in which Earth and other heavenly
bodies all orbited the Sun – a theory he had developed through observations.
His heretical
ideas, like those of today’s climate realists who disagree that man’s activities
are contributing to any meaningful degree in the Earth’s temperature, were out
of step with the current dogma, but were correct that Earth was not the center
of the universe. For daring to express contrary ideas, Galileo faced the
Inquisition, and in 1616 was ordered “... to abandon completely... the opinion
that the sun stands still at the center of the world and the earth moves, and
henceforth not to hold, teach, or defend it in any way whatever, either orally
or in writing.”
Galileo
was correct that Earth was not the center of the universe, and his theory
displaced the previously held “settled science” of geocentrism. Only later
would Galileo’s heliocentric idea be found to also not be completely accurate. Settled
science once again fell to objective investigation.
One gets
the idea that climate alarmists’ positions are so weak that they have to
prevent contrary views from being aired for their ideas to win the day.
However, limiting discussion of controversial topics is
precisely the wrong thing to do. Why would any reasonable and objective person
object to discussing opposing views of important issues such as global
warming/climate change, abortion, gun control, vaccinations, the “right” and
“wrong” kinds of foods and drinks to consume? As BOE members Linger and
Campbell pointed out, such openness will lead only to a deeper understanding of
the issues.
There is
certainly nothing wrong with the concept of standards of learning, but school
boards at every level must be careful to assure that by adopting a set of
standards they are not actually imposing ideological perspectives on young,
impressionable minds.
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