AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE (1982)
Forced Teaching of Creationist Beliefs in Public School Science Education
Whereas it is the responsibility of the American Association for the Advancement of Science to preserve the integrity of science, and
Whereas science is a systematic method of investigation based on continuous experimentation, observation, and measurement leading to evolving explanations of natural phenomena, explanations which are continuously open to further testing, and
Whereas evolution fully satisfies these criteria, irrespective of remaining debates concerning its detailed mechanisms, and
Whereas the Association respects the right of people to hold diverse beliefs about creation that do not come within the definitions of science, and
Whereas Creationist groups are imposing beliefs disguised as science upon teachers and students to the detriment and distortion of public education in the United States
Therefore be it resolved that because "Creationist Science" has no scientific validity it should not be taught as science, and further, that the AAAS views legislation requiring "Creationist Science" to be taught in public schools as a real and present threat to the integrity of education and the teaching of science, and
Be it further resolved that the AAAS urges citizens, educational
authorities, and legislators to oppose the compulsory inclusion in science
education curricula of beliefs that are not amenable to the process of
scrutiny, testing, and revision that is indispensable to science.
The above resolution is a composite of draft resolutions written by D. Allen Bromley, Edward R. Brunner, Anna J. Harrison, and Glynn Isaac. It was passed by the AAAS Board of Directors on 4 January 1982 and submitted to the Council as a proposed joint resolution of the Board and Council. It was passed by Council on 7 January, and published in Science 215:1072 on 26 February.