On August 11, 1999--ten years ago tomorrow--the State Board of Education in Kansas voted to take evolution out of the state's science curriculum. This came as quite a shock to a lot of biologists I spoke to at the time. A lot of them couldn't understand how it have happened. Some decided to get together to plan what to do in response. With lightning-fast reflexes, a meeting was arranged over a year later. Representatives from major scientific societies gathered to make a plan. They invited a number of other people to join them. I was one. And, frankly, I felt like I was observing a meeting of representatives of tribes from some New Guinea highland forest, who were following rules and speaking a language that I could not begin to understand. At the end of the meeting, these dozens of scientists made a momentous decision. They would...wait for it...go back ...
Book [P]review: For The Scientist
Explore the evolution of scientific communication and how scientists bridge gaps with the public through effective media interactions.
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