Abstract

ABSTRACT Previous research on evolution education in Utah college biology courses highlighted how frequently professors faced student challenges to evolution and examined the strategies they used to deal with those challenges. In the twenty years since that study, the population of Utah has become less religious and more diverse. Meanwhile, the US population has become more accepting of evolution. To investigate college biology evolution education in Utah’s current demographic and ideological climate, we repeated research completed in 2002. Statistical analysis of group differences between the 2002 sample (N = 78) and the 2022 sample (N = 135) suggests that current college biology instructors experience fewer challenges to evolution. Strategies for dealing with student challenges also shifted. The 2022 sample reported greater reliance on presenting religion and science as not mutually exclusive and highlighting evolution as science, while reporting reduced emphasis on presenting evolution and religion as distinct concepts. The recent sample had more than double the proportion of women as the previous sample, reflecting a nationwide trend of stronger representation by women in STEM fields. Our findings suggest that instructors who teach evolution should periodically examine their methods to ensure they are teaching in a way that connects with current students.

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