Abstract

BackgroundDespite substantial research on the teaching of evolution in the public high schools of the United States, we know very little about evolution teaching in the middle grades. In this paper, we rely on a 2019 nationally representative sample of 678 middle school science teachers to investigate how much time they report devoting to evolution and the key messages they report conveying about it, using this information to assess the state of middle school evolution education today. Throughout these analyses, we provide comparative data from high school biology teachers to serve as a baseline.ResultsWe find that, compared to high school biology teachers, middle school science teachers report themselves as less well-equipped to teach evolution, devoting less class time to evolution, and more likely to avoid taking a stand on the scientific standing of evolution and creationism. We show that middle school science teachers with extensive pre-service coursework in evolution and in states that have adopted the Next Generation Science Standards are more likely to report devoting more class time to evolution. Similarly, we show that middle school teachers in states that have adopted the Next Generation Science Standards and who are newer to the profession are more likely to report themselves as presenting evolution as settled science.ConclusionOur findings suggest avenues for the improvement of middle school evolution education through teacher preparation and public policy; in addition, a degree of improvement through retirement and replacement is likely to occur naturally in the coming years. More generally, our results highlight the need for further research on middle school education. Our broad statistical portrait provides an overview that merits elaboration with more detailed research on specific topics.

Highlights

  • Despite substantial research on the teaching of evolution in the public high schools of the United States, we know very little about evolution teaching in the middle grades

  • The middle school years are important for introducing students to many of the evolutionary concepts that they will need to master the topic in high school. (In the United States, middle schools generally serve grades 6 through 8, with students usually 11 to 14 years old, while junior high schools generally serve grades 7 through 9; with students usually 12 to 15 years old; for brevity, we will use “middle school” to abbreviate “middle or junior high school.”) the foundations for understanding evolution are woven into the Generation Science Standards beginning in kindergarten

  • Middle school science teachers report devoting considerable time to evolution, so it is imperative that the quality of that instruction and the challenges faced by middle school science teachers be understood and appreciated

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Summary

Introduction

Despite substantial research on the teaching of evolution in the public high schools of the United States, we know very little about evolution teaching in the middle grades. We rely on a 2019 nationally representative sample of 678 middle school science teachers to investigate how much time they report devoting to evolution and the key messages they report conveying about it, using this information to assess the state of middle school evolution education today Throughout these analyses, we provide comparative data from high school biology teachers to serve as a baseline. We present a series of results on how much time these teachers report devoting to evolution and the key messages they report conveying to students, using this information to assess the state of middle school evolution education today Throughout these analyses, we provide comparative data from high school biology teachers. As a result, when examining the data from identical questions, it is possible to compare this wave’s middle school sample to the middle school sample from 2014 to 2015, and to compare the high school biology sample to the 2007 survey and to the biology subgroup within the 2014–2015 high school sample

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