A win for reality in Texas!

The Texas State Board of Education endorses science-based materials, rejecting creationist supplements—a victory for science education!

Written byPhil Plait
| 1 min read
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Some great news out of the Lone Star State: the Texas State Board of Education unanimously rejected creationist supplements to textbooks, instead voting to endorse science-based ones. Yay! These supplements are for students to use in classrooms in addition to their textbooks. A passel of creationist ones had been submitted for approval by the BoE back in April by a creationist special interest group, as well as materials based on science submitted by mainstream publishers. Last week, the BoE voted on which to use, and science won. The links above go to the National Center for Science Education. They are a group that fought valiantly for the science-based materials, which is clearly why they won the day; they greatly outnumbered witnesses for creationism. Clearly, showing up is half the battle. At least. My congratulations to everyone at the NCSE for this victory. Josh Rosenau, who writes the Thoughts from Kansas blog and was one of the people at the Texas hearings, has written about this debate in detail (including earlier posts here, and here) if you're looking for more info from an insider's viewpoint. So, because of this, I am happy to create this new graphic:

I hope I have many, many more chances to use it in the future.


Related posts: - Standing up to the experts - Texas creationist McLeroy spins the educational disaster he created - Texas State Board of Education confirms irony is dead - Creationists suffer another legal defeat

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