| Literature DB >> 29167225 |
M Elizabeth Barnes1, Sara E Brownell2.
Abstract
Low acceptance of evolution among undergraduate students is common and is best predicted by religious beliefs. Decreasing students' perceived conflict between religion and evolution could increase their acceptance of evolution. However, college biology instructors may struggle with trying to decrease students' perceived conflict between religion and evolution because of differences in the religious cultures and beliefs of instructors and students. Although a large percentage of undergraduate students in evolution courses are religious, most instructors teaching evolution are not. To consider differences between the secular culture of many college instructors and the religious culture of many students, we propose using a lens of cultural competence to create effective evolution education. Cultural competence is the ability of individuals from one culture (in this case, primarily secular instructors who are teaching evolution) to bridge cultural differences and effectively communicate with individuals from a different culture (in this case, primarily religious undergraduate biology students). We call this new framework Religious Cultural Competence in Evolution Education (ReCCEE). In this essay, we describe a suite of culturally competent practices that can help instructors reduce students' perceived conflict between evolution and religion, increase students' acceptance of evolution, and help create more inclusive undergraduate biology classrooms.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29167225 PMCID: PMC5749973 DOI: 10.1187/cbe.17-04-0062
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CBE Life Sci Educ ISSN: 1931-7913 Impact factor: 3.325
Rates of religiosity among students in biology classes at a large southwestern R1 university in Arizonaa
| Semester | Population | Sample size | % Self-identified with a religion | % Who agree religion is an important part of their identity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2014 Fall | Introductory biology students | 1440 | 64 | 55 |
| 2016 Fall | Introductory biology and upper-level biology students | 462 | 79 | 45 |
| 2017 Spring | Upper-level evolution students | 389 | 77 | 40 |
aArizona ranks 24th in religiosity among all U.S. states, with 51% of residents reporting that religion is important to their lives. Students completed an online survey that asked them to self-identify their religious affiliations and to what extent their religious affiliations were important to their identities. Students could decline to state.
ReCCEE practices and citations supporting them
| ReCCEE practice | Description | Empirical support |
|---|---|---|
| Acknowledge | Acknowledge that some students may see a conflict between evolution and their religious beliefs. | |
| Explore | Discuss and encourage the exploration of students’ personal views on evolution and religion. | |
| Teach the nature of science | Explain to students the bounded nature of science and different ways of knowing. | |
| Outline the spectrum of viewpoints | Explain that there are diverse viewpoints on evolution and religion and that viewpoints are not restricted to atheistic evolution and special creationism. Discuss the possibility of theistic evolution. | |
| Provide role models | Highlight religious leaders and biologists who accept evolution. | |
| Highlight potential compatibility | Explicitly discuss the potential compatibility between evolution and religion. |
Examples of ReCCEE activities that could be implemented when teaching evolution
| Activity | Description | ReCCEE practice |
|---|---|---|
| Surveys | Survey your students on their beliefs about religion and evolution so you know your audience and can acknowledge them. Are they religious? Which religious denominations do they identify with? Do they see a conflict between their religious beliefs and evolution? Do they accept evolution? Then acknowledge the different views that students have in class while keeping specific student beliefs confidential. | Acknowledge, explore |
| Journals | Assign students a journaling activity to encourage them to reflect on their stances about religion and evolution. Possible prompts include, “In your view, do you see a conflict between your personal beliefs and evolution?,” “Have your views on the relationship between religion and evolution changed? Why or why not?” | Explore |
| Reading | Assign students to read biographies of scientists who are religious and accept evolution. Try to have students read biographies of scientists from different religious denominations so that each student (or as many as possible) can see his or her identity reflected in at least one scientist. To make sure readings are representative of all students in the class, including those without religious beliefs, also include secular scientists who accept evolution. | Provide role models who accept evolution, highlight potential compatibility |
| Instructor presentation | Show the official stances of different religious denominations on evolution. For instance, the Catholic church officially supports evolution, while the Mormon church is silent with respect to evolution. It is best to know which religious denominations your students identify with to be relevant to most of your students. | Outline spectrum of views, highlight potential compatibility |
| Group work | Make a list of questions such as “Does God exist?,” “How old is life on Earth?,” “Did God create humankind?,” and “Do humans share a common ancestor with chimpanzees?,” and have students categorize and discuss which questions are subject to scientific analysis, which are not, and why. | Teach the nature of science |
| Instructor presentation | Show different positions on the relationship between religion and evolution, including special creationism, theistic evolution, agnostic evolution, and atheistic evolution. Distinguish which of these positions is philosophically compatible with the evidence from science and which are not. | Outline the spectrum of views, teach the nature of science, highlight potential compatibility |
| Guest visitors | Have religious scientists visit the class and talk with students about how they reconcile religious beliefs and evolution. | Provide role models, highlight potential compatibility |