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Science

Plaintiffs Recall Atmosphere Leading Up to Intelligent-Design Policy

By Sean Cavanagh ā€” September 28, 2005 4 min read
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The concept of ā€œintelligent designā€ materialized in the Dover school district only after board members spoke openly about the need to insert Christian religious beliefs into science classes, plaintiffs testified here in a landmark lawsuit.

Those witnessesā€”all parents of students in the rural, south-central Pennsylvania districtā€”said in their Sept. 27 court testimony that school board members quoted biblical scripture and cited their religious beliefs in public meetings and other settings in explaining their quarrels with the theory of evolution.

One of the plaintiffs, Bryan Rehm, a parent and former science teacher at Dover High School, testified that board member Alan Bonsell asked science teachers on several occasions to consider teaching creationism alongside evolution. Mr. Rehm claims that Mr. Bonsell made those requests before the districtā€™s intelligent-design policy was approved in October 2004.

ā€œWe repeatedly told him, ā€˜Weā€™re not going to do this,ā€™ā€ testified Mr. Rehm, who now teaches in another district. ā€œItā€™s not an appropriate decision.ā€

That testimony emerged on the second day of Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, a closely watched case being heard in federal court in Harrisburg. Eleven parents, along with the American Civil Liberties Union and Americans United for Separation of Church and State, are suing the 3,600-student district over its policy to require that students be exposed to intelligent design.

Doverā€™s school board voted 6-3 last year to rewrite the districtā€™s science curriculum to mandate that students be made aware of ā€œgaps/ problemsā€ in evolution, the widely accepted scientific theory that humans and other living things evolved from common ancestors through the process of natural selection and random mutation. The school board also required that students be made aware of intelligent design, a much-criticized concept positing that evolution cannot explain the development of all living things, and that an unnamed guiding force must have played a role in directing that process.

Board members in Dover later voted to require that their districtā€™s 9th grade biology students be read a statement that introduces the teenagers to the concept of intelligent design. Students have been allowed to opt out of hearing that statement, which also directs them to the pro-intelligent-design textbook Of Pandas and People.

ā€˜Turning Into a Zooā€™

Legal observers say the Dover case is the first in the country in which the constitutionality of intelligent designā€”rather than the biblical belief known as creationismā€”is facing a court challenge.

The vast majority of scientists say intelligent design is nothing more than religious belief and argue that it has no place in science classesā€”positions rejected by defenders of that concept. In court this week, the Dover plaintiffs have appeared determined to show that the school board membersā€™ embrace of intelligent design was grounded in religious faith, not sound policy.

In their testimony, the Dover parents each described a series of increasingly rancorous public meetings throughout 2004 in which board members allegedly spoke unreservedly about their Christian beliefs and their skepticism of evolution.

At one such meeting, Mr. Rehm said board member William Buckingham, who has since resigned from the board, described a biology textbook being considered for use in the district as ā€œlaced with Darwinism.ā€

During another public discussion of evolution, Mr. Buckingham made reference to Jesus Christā€™s crucifixion and said, ā€œSomebody should stand up for him,ā€ Mr. Rehm testified. He could not recall whether the comments allegedly made by board members occurred at the same meeting or at different ones. In court documents, the defense has denied that Mr. Buckingham made that reference to Jesus.

ā€œIt was turning into a zoo,ā€ Mr. Rehm recalled.

Another plaintiff, Aralene D. Callahan, testified that when a Dover High graduate who was in college spoke at a 2004 board meeting about the importance of teaching evolution in preparing students for higher education, Mr. Buckingham told him: ā€œYouā€™re a perfect example of what happens to students when they go to college. They get brainwashed.ā€

Ms. Callahan, a former school board member, also testified that Mr. Bonsell talked at a private board retreat about the need for evolution and creationism to be taught on a ā€œfifty-fiftyā€ basis in science class.

ā€˜Their Side of the Storyā€™

Outside the Harrisburg courtroom at the end of the day, Mr. Bonsell described much of the plaintiffsā€™ testimony as ā€œinaccurateā€ and predicted that a different picture would emerge when the defense presents its case, most likely within two or three weeks. ā€œThis is their side of the story,ā€ he said.

ā€œWhen it all comes out, itā€™ll be clear this is not religious, itā€™s educational,ā€ said Mr. Bonsell.

The districtā€™s policy, he argued, puts no pressure on students to accept intelligent design, and no other attempts were made to teach the concept in science class. ā€œThis is a one-minute statement,ā€ Mr. Bonsell said of the four-paragraph text approved by the Dover district. ā€œThatā€™s it.ā€

During his testimony, Mr. Rehm said the boardā€™s policy, and his decision to fight it, has led to friction between him and other members of his otherwise placid community. People on the street regularly call him an ā€œatheist,ā€ among other names, to his face, he said.

Before the controversy, he said, residents saw him as a neighbor. Now, he said, ā€œpeople know you as a plaintiff.ā€

But Mr. Bonsell speculated that the harsh words directed at Mr. Rehm by locals were the natural result of something else: the plaintiffā€™s political ambitions. Mr. Rehm is one of several people who oppose the districtā€™s intelligent-design policy and are running for election to the Dover school board this fall.

ā€œWhen youā€™re a candidate,ā€ Mr. Bonsell told reporters at the end of the day, ā€œwelcome to politics.ā€

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