News — The fight to keep evolution in the public school curriculum is well known. But a quieter fight is being waged on college campuses, where evolution is taught primarily as a biological topic and avoided in human social sciences and humanities.

That is now changing, thanks to a course and multicourse curriculum that was developed at Binghamton University, State University of New York, and which is now spreading to other campuses in the form of a consortium funded by the National Science Foundation.

The course, titled 鈥淓volution for Everyone鈥, which is described in a current issue of the journal, Evolution, Education, and Outreach, is taught by Binghamton University evolutionary biologists, Daniel O鈥橞rien and David Sloan Wilson, and serves as the cornerstone of a multicourse curriculum - the Evolutionary Studies (EvoS) program.

鈥淓volution for Everyone鈥 is available to students from all majors and teaches evolution as a subject that applies to all human-related subjects in addition to the biological world. It begins with the basic principles of evolution, similar to a standard evolution course, but then branches out to consider unorthodox topics such as dating, personality, economics, politics, and religion in addition to more standard biological topics. Experiments are conducted in class, with the students acting first as subjects and then analyzing the results, so that they learn about scientific inquiry in addition to evolution per se. Finally, the students get to show off their new skills by choosing a topic of their own to study from an evolutionary perspective, culminating in a poster session emulating a scientific conference and open to the campus community. Every topic considered during the course reinforces a style of thinking in which the same basic principles are applied to a diversity of subjects.

To assess learning for each individual student, a survey, which was developed by Patricia Hawley at the University of Kansas, was administered at the beginning and end of the semester. Results show that students learn the material and appreciate its relevance better than most college evolution courses, regardless of their previous science training, their political beliefs, or even their religious beliefs.

According to O鈥橞rien, 鈥淚t is rare for an evolution-oriented course at the University level to have this sort of effect. Material can easily be memorized, but it is uncommon for students to incorporate it into their general attitudes, not to mention their daily lives.鈥

The multicourse curriculum, or EvoS, enables students to explore their evolutionary interests throughout their academic career. Binghamton鈥檚 EvoS program was initiated in 2003, a second program was initiated at the State University of New York鈥檚 New Paltz campus in 2007, and both programs received National Science Foundation funding in 2008 to expand into a nationwide consortium (see ). Groups of faculty from over 40 institutions have joined the consortium during its first year alone.

According to Wilson, 鈥淭he key to teaching evolution is to make it unthreatening, explanatory, and useful for the subjects that the students care about the most. This is how evolution will eventually be taught on all campuses. The 鈥淓volution for Everyone鈥 course and the EvoS Consortium will make it happen sooner rather than later.鈥

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CITATIONS

Evolution: Education and Outreach (Volume 2, Number 3, September 2009)