Human evolution in the South African school curriculum

A decade after the introduction of the topic into the South African public school curriculum, the theory of evolution by natural selection is poorly understood among those who teach it, and that flawed understanding is transferred to those attempting to learn it. The curricula, support material and textbooks designed to underpin teaching and learning of evolution are often inaccurate. Deeply held religious views in the country, especially Christianity, remain a stumbling block towards understanding and accepting evolution. The lack of scientific literacy allows for the continuation of Social Darwinism and racial stereotypes and deprives the victims of those ills of the knowledge and mechanisms of thought to counter these ideas. This review explores the relatively sparse but nevertheless well-conducted research into evolution education in South Africa. We conclude that an understanding of human evolution is essential to the country's growing democracy because it provides a framework within which South Africans can understand and appreciate the diversity and heterogeneous nature of our society. SIGNIFICANCE: • Various obstacles in the teaching and learning of evolution are identified, and generalisable recommendations are provided to improve evolution education on a practical level. • Evolution education is important for the South African public: to take pride in our rich fossil resources; to understand and appreciate human diversity; to dispel the racist myths of Social Darwinism; and to ensure the success of our education system by teaching the consilience of induction and logical reasoning. • This synthesis of the research provides a starting point for anyone wanting to conduct evolution education research in South Africa in the future, specifically those in the fields of curriculum reform, life sciences or biological anthropology

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sutherland,Clarisa, L'Abbé,Ericka N.
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Academy of Science of South Africa 2019
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0038-23532019000400014
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id oai:scielo:S0038-23532019000400014
record_format ojs
spelling oai:scielo:S0038-235320190004000142019-08-27Human evolution in the South African school curriculumSutherland,ClarisaL'Abbé,Ericka N. Life Sciences literacy science education Social Darwinism evolution education Life Sciences curriculum A decade after the introduction of the topic into the South African public school curriculum, the theory of evolution by natural selection is poorly understood among those who teach it, and that flawed understanding is transferred to those attempting to learn it. The curricula, support material and textbooks designed to underpin teaching and learning of evolution are often inaccurate. Deeply held religious views in the country, especially Christianity, remain a stumbling block towards understanding and accepting evolution. The lack of scientific literacy allows for the continuation of Social Darwinism and racial stereotypes and deprives the victims of those ills of the knowledge and mechanisms of thought to counter these ideas. This review explores the relatively sparse but nevertheless well-conducted research into evolution education in South Africa. We conclude that an understanding of human evolution is essential to the country's growing democracy because it provides a framework within which South Africans can understand and appreciate the diversity and heterogeneous nature of our society. SIGNIFICANCE: • Various obstacles in the teaching and learning of evolution are identified, and generalisable recommendations are provided to improve evolution education on a practical level. • Evolution education is important for the South African public: to take pride in our rich fossil resources; to understand and appreciate human diversity; to dispel the racist myths of Social Darwinism; and to ensure the success of our education system by teaching the consilience of induction and logical reasoning. • This synthesis of the research provides a starting point for anyone wanting to conduct evolution education research in South Africa in the future, specifically those in the fields of curriculum reform, life sciences or biological anthropologyAcademy of Science of South AfricaSouth African Journal of Science v.115 n.7-8 20192019-08-01journal articletext/htmlhttp://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0038-23532019000400014en
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Sudáfrica
countrycode ZA
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-za
tag revista
region África del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Sutherland,Clarisa
L'Abbé,Ericka N.
spellingShingle Sutherland,Clarisa
L'Abbé,Ericka N.
Human evolution in the South African school curriculum
author_facet Sutherland,Clarisa
L'Abbé,Ericka N.
author_sort Sutherland,Clarisa
title Human evolution in the South African school curriculum
title_short Human evolution in the South African school curriculum
title_full Human evolution in the South African school curriculum
title_fullStr Human evolution in the South African school curriculum
title_full_unstemmed Human evolution in the South African school curriculum
title_sort human evolution in the south african school curriculum
description A decade after the introduction of the topic into the South African public school curriculum, the theory of evolution by natural selection is poorly understood among those who teach it, and that flawed understanding is transferred to those attempting to learn it. The curricula, support material and textbooks designed to underpin teaching and learning of evolution are often inaccurate. Deeply held religious views in the country, especially Christianity, remain a stumbling block towards understanding and accepting evolution. The lack of scientific literacy allows for the continuation of Social Darwinism and racial stereotypes and deprives the victims of those ills of the knowledge and mechanisms of thought to counter these ideas. This review explores the relatively sparse but nevertheless well-conducted research into evolution education in South Africa. We conclude that an understanding of human evolution is essential to the country's growing democracy because it provides a framework within which South Africans can understand and appreciate the diversity and heterogeneous nature of our society. SIGNIFICANCE: • Various obstacles in the teaching and learning of evolution are identified, and generalisable recommendations are provided to improve evolution education on a practical level. • Evolution education is important for the South African public: to take pride in our rich fossil resources; to understand and appreciate human diversity; to dispel the racist myths of Social Darwinism; and to ensure the success of our education system by teaching the consilience of induction and logical reasoning. • This synthesis of the research provides a starting point for anyone wanting to conduct evolution education research in South Africa in the future, specifically those in the fields of curriculum reform, life sciences or biological anthropology
publisher Academy of Science of South Africa
publishDate 2019
url http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0038-23532019000400014
work_keys_str_mv AT sutherlandclarisa humanevolutioninthesouthafricanschoolcurriculum
AT labbeerickan humanevolutioninthesouthafricanschoolcurriculum
_version_ 1756004876303728640