Employer of the week

Education news for students and graduates

  • image
    10 November 2008

    Poll finds support among teachers for creationism

    Nearly one-third (29 per cent) of teachers in the UK believe creationism and intelligent design should be taught in science lessons, a new survey has found.

    Teachers TV surveyed 10,600 education professions and received 1,210 responses, reports The Guardian.

    According to the poll, almost 50 per cent of respondents think that excluding alternatives to evolution would be counter-productive.

    The survey also found strong support for the views of Professor Michael Reiss, the former Director of Education at the Royal Society, who left his job in September over comments regarding the teaching of creationism in science lessons.

    Andrew Bethell, Chief Executive of Teachers TV, said: 'This poll data confirms that the debate on whether there is a place for the teaching of creationism in the classroom is still fierce.'

    The issue is already a hot topic in parts of the US where religious faith plays a greater role in peoples' everyday lives.
    ADNFCR-1252-ID-18866561-ADNFCR

Register for My GET

  • GET is your complete guide to graduate careers
  • Find graduate jobs, current graduate vacancies, professional training, graduate career advice and graduate careers news
  • Join My GET now for personalised graduate jobs and advice by e-mail
Register for graduate jobs and graduate career advice by e-mail
 

News

Related pages

Graduate career advice
Graduate jobs and graduate schemes
  • Group GTI - Student recruitment, research, marketing and management
  • Details of the GET ABCE audit