| Literature DB >> 27193289 |
M Elizabeth Barnes1, Sara E Brownell2.
Abstract
Evolution is a core concept of biology, and yet many college biology students do not accept evolution because of their religious beliefs. However, we do not currently know how instructors perceive their role in helping students accept evolution or how they address the perceived conflict between religion and evolution when they teach evolution. This study explores instructor practices and beliefs related to mitigating students' perceived conflict between religion and evolution. Interviews with 32 instructors revealed that many instructors do not believe it is their goal to help students accept evolution and that most instructors do not address the perceived conflict between religion and evolution. Instructors cited many barriers to discussing religion in the context of evolution in their classes, most notably the instructors' own personal beliefs that religion and evolution may be incompatible. These data are exploratory and are intended to stimulate a series of questions about how we as college biology instructors teach evolution.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27193289 PMCID: PMC4909340 DOI: 10.1187/cbe.15-11-0243
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CBE Life Sci Educ ISSN: 1931-7913 Impact factor: 3.325
Question checklist that was used during interviews with instructors
| Experience teaching evolution | How many years have you been teaching evolution to undergraduates? |
| Are there specific strategies you use to teach evolution? What are they? | |
| Do you have any strategies related to religion when you teach evolution? What are they? | |
| Do you mention religion at all in your class? How? | |
| Have you ever been challenged by a student in class about evolution? If so, describe your experience. | |
| Perception of student rejection rates | Would you be willing to guess what percent of students in your class reject evolution? |
| Have you ever asked? | |
| Goal when teaching evolution | As a biology educator do you think it is part of your job or goal to help students become more comfortable with and accept evolution? Or do you only aim for students to understand evolution? Why? |
| Use of specific strategies when discussing religion and evolution | Do you discuss the spectrum of viewpoints that exist about the relationship between religion and evolution? If no, why not? Would you? |
| Do you discuss that evolution does not mean atheism/ evolution is compatible with religion? If no, why not? Would you? | |
| Do you provide students with religious scientist role models who accept evolution? If no, why not? Would you? | |
| Perception of what it means to “accept evolution” | What is “acceptance of evolution”? |
| If a student says they accept common ancestry and natural selection but they believe God started or planned evolution, does that student accept or reject evolution? Why or why not? | |
| Personal experiences learning evolution | Did you experience any worldview conflict with evolution when you learned about it? Any other time? Why or why not? |
Instructor survey responses to demographic questions and other survey questions as well as their position at an R1 institution or community college
| Pseudonym | Gender | Current religious identification | Family religion in childhood | Highest degree | Years teaching undergraduate biology | Level of self-reported experience teaching evolution | Personal belief about God and evolutiona | R1 or CC instructorb |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neil | Male | Agnostic | Jewish | PhD | 28 | Moderate | No God involvement | R1 |
| Albert | Male | Agnostic | Catholic | PhD | 12 | High | Unsure of God involvement | R1 |
| Martin | Male | Agnostic | Protestant | PhD | 44 | High | No God involvement | R1 |
| Janet | Female | Agnostic | Catholic | PhD | 20 | Moderate | No God involvement | CC |
| Chester | Male | Agnostic | Protestant | PhD | 22 | High | No God involvement | CC |
| Frank | Male | Atheist | Catholic | PhD | 7 | Moderate | No God involvement | R1 |
| Edward | Male | Atheist | Protestant | PhD | 24 | Moderate | No God involvement | R1 |
| Marie | Female | Atheist | Protestant | PhD | 23 | Low | No God involvement | R1 |
| John | Male | Atheist | Atheist/Catholic | PhD | 30 | Low | No God involvement | R1 |
| Anthony | Male | Atheist | Catholic | PhD | 25 | High | No God involvement | R1 |
| Rose | Female | Atheist | Jewish | PhD | 32 | High | Unsure of God involvement | R1 |
| Rachel | Female | Atheist | Jewish/Agnostic | PhD | 11 | High | No God involvement | R1 |
| Lynn | Female | Atheist | Protestant | PhD | 10 | Moderate | No God involvement | R1 |
| Victoria | Female | Atheist | Protestant | PhD | 10 | High | No God involvement | CC |
| Craig | Male | Atheist | Atheist | Master’s | 11 | High | No God involvement | CC |
| Irene | Female | Atheist | Protestant/Atheist | Master’s | 43 | High | No God involvement | CC |
| Emma | Female | Atheist | Catholic | PhD | 20 | Low | No God involvement | CC |
| Danny | Male | Atheist | Protestant | PhD | 19 | High | No God involvement | CC |
| Theodore | Male | Atheist | Catholic | PhD | 29 | High | No God involvement | CC |
| Charles | Male | Atheist/cultural Jew | Jewish | PhD | 11 | High | No God involvement | R1 |
| Ernest | Male | Catholic | Catholic | PhD | 15 | High | No God involvement | R1 |
| Greg | Male | Catholic | Catholic | PhD | 20 | High | Unsure of God involvement | R1 |
| David | Male | Catholic/Jewish/Agnostic | Catholic | PhD | 11 | Moderate | No God involvement | R1 |
| Samuel | Male | Jewish | Jewish | PhD | 40 | High | Refused to answer | R1 |
| Ronald | Male | Jewish | Protestant/agnostic | PhD | 17 | High | Unsure of God involvement | R1 |
| Richard | Male | Jewish | Jewish | PhD | 20 | High | No God involvement | CC |
| Thomas | Male | No answer | No answer | PhD | 17 | High | Refused to answer | R1 |
| Brittany | Female | Other | Agnostic | PhD | 10 | High | Unsure of God involvement | CC |
| George | Male | Protestant | Protestant | PhD | 41 | Moderate | No God involvement | R1 |
| Jonathan | Male | Protestant | Protestant/Catholic | PhD | 35 | High | Unsure of God involvement | CC |
| Faye | Female | Protestant | Protestant | Master’s | 18 | Low | God guided | CC |
| Anne | Female | Questioning | Protestant | PhD | 12 | Moderate | Unsure of God involvement | CC |
aFor personal belief in God’s role in evolution: No God = human beings have evolved over billions of years from older life-forms and God was not involved in this process; Unsure of God = human beings have evolved over billions of years from older life-forms and I do not know whether or not God had anything to do with this process; God guided = human beings have evolved over billions of years from older life-forms and God guided this process.
bCC = community college.
Selected results of qualitative analyses for each instructor
| Definition of acceptance of evolutiona | How do they discuss religion? | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pseudonym | CA | NS | NG | AFCT | SP | LCT | Is it their goal to help students accept evolution? | In-depth | Brief | Does not | Evolution is incompatible with religion | Number of instructional approaches cited by literatureb |
| Neil | X | X | Yes | X | 0 | |||||||
| Albert | X | X | X | Yes | X | 0 | ||||||
| Martin | X | X | X | No | X | X | 3 | |||||
| Janet | X | X | No | X | 2 | |||||||
| Chester | X | X | X | Yes | X | X | 3 | |||||
| Frank | X | X | No | X | 0 | |||||||
| Edward | X | X | X | No | X | 0 | ||||||
| Marie | X | X | Yes | X | 0 | |||||||
| John | Yes | X | 0 | |||||||||
| Anthony | X | X | X | Yes | X | 0 | ||||||
| Rose | X | No | X | 0 | ||||||||
| Rachel | X | X | X | Yes | X | 2 | ||||||
| Lynn | X | X | X | No | X | 0 | ||||||
| Victoria | X | X | No | X | 0 | |||||||
| Craig | X | X | No | X | X | 2 | ||||||
| Irene | X | X | Yes | X | 1 | |||||||
| Emma | X | X | X | X | No | X | X | 0 | ||||
| Danny | X | X | X | Yes | X | 1 | ||||||
| Theodore | X | No | X | X | 0 | |||||||
| Charles | X | X | No | X | 1 | |||||||
| Ernest | X | X | X | X | Yes | X | 1 | |||||
| Greg | X | X | No | X | 3 | |||||||
| David | X | X | X | No | X | 1 | ||||||
| Samuel | X | X | No | X | X | 0 | ||||||
| Ronald | X | No | X | 3 | ||||||||
| Richard | No | X | 2 | |||||||||
| Thomas | X | X | No | X | 0 | |||||||
| Brittany | X | X | Yes | X | 0 | |||||||
| George | X | X | X | No | X | X | 1 | |||||
| Jonathan | X | X | X | Yes | X | 0 | ||||||
| Faye | X | X | No | X | 0 | |||||||
| Anne | X | X | No | X | 0 | |||||||
aFor definition of acceptance of evolution: CA = common ancestry; NS = natural selection; NG = no God planning, starting, or guiding evolution; AFCT = allele frequency change in a population over time; SP = speciation; LCT = life changes over time; an “X” under a column indicates that an instructor believed acceptance of that concept was required for student acceptance of evolution.
bNumber of positive strategies refers to whether they used 1, 2, or 3 of the specific positive strategies that may help student accept evolution: discussing religious scientist role models who accept evolution, discussing the spectrum of viewpoints about religion and evolution, and telling students that religion and evolution can be compatible with one another.
Selected results of qualitative analyses for each instructor
| Barriers to discussing religion | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pseudonym | Classroom constraints | Inappropriate class | Lack of training | Personal beliefs | Did they experience a worldview conflict with evolution? | Have they been challenged in class about evolution? | Have they polled their students on acceptance of evolution? | How many students do they guess reject evolution in their classes? |
| Neil | X | No | No | No | <10% | |||
| Albert | X | X | Yes | No | No | No perception | ||
| Martin | Yes | Yes | No | <10% | ||||
| Janet | No | Yes | No | 5–15% | ||||
| Chester | No | No | No | A “fair number” | ||||
| Frank | No | No | No | No perception | ||||
| Edward | X | No | No | No | Vague | |||
| Marie | X | No | No | No | No perception | |||
| John | X | X | No | No | No | 5% | ||
| Anthony | X | No | No | No | 10% | |||
| Rose | X | X | No | Yes | No | No perception | ||
| Rachel | No | Yes | No | No perception | ||||
| Lynn | Yes | Yes | No | 40% | ||||
| Victoria | X | X | No | No | No | 25% | ||
| Craig | X | No | No | No | 5% | |||
| Irene | X | No | No | No | Very few | |||
| Emma | X | No | No | No | 20% | |||
| Danny | Yes | Yes | Yes | 20% | ||||
| Theodore | X | X | No | No | No | No perception | ||
| Charles | X | No | No | No | Vague | |||
| Ernest | No | No | Yes | No memory | ||||
| Greg | No | Yes | Yes | 34% | ||||
| David | X | No | No | No | No perception | |||
| Samuel | X | No | No | Vague | Vague | |||
| Ronald | No | Yes | No | One to two students | ||||
| Richard | No | No | No | No perception | ||||
| Thomas | No | No | Vague | Vague | ||||
| Brittany | X | X | No | No | No | No perception | ||
| George | X | X | No | No | No | No perception | ||
| Jonathan | X | X | Yes | No | No | No perception | ||
| Faye | X | No | No | No | No perception | |||
| Anne | Yes | No | No | No perception | ||||