More on the creation/evolution debate within public schools in Cobb County, Georgia
The Christian textbooks used in several new college-prep courses considered "too religious" to be accepted for college-entrance credit at UC.
This is the 8th year that AiG has been able to distribute resources at the National Education Association's (NEA) annual meeting.
Terry Mortenson talks about the upcoming outreach at the boothof the 'Creation Science Educators Caucus' at the 2003 National Educators Associatioin.
A professor at Texas Tech University has written some alarming anti-creationist comments about letters of recommendation, which are required for students to enter medical school.
It was indeed a wonderful experience for us to participate with Answers in Genesis as we worked together to support the NEA-Creation Science Educators’ Caucus in the NEA National Convention in Dallas.
The United States Senate recently passed an Elementary and Secondary Education Act with a ‘sense of the Senate’ amendment.
A major American magazine devotes most of its pages to this theme: what American students often learn in their public schools is just plain wrong.
“I found your articles to be extremely helpful, especially the one about the fraud of embryonic recapitulation.”
In the following guest commentary you will discover how education in America has changed from being Christian-based to humanistic-based, and how evolutionary thinking played a role in this shift.
Fifty studies on teaching origins found about 90% of the public desired that both creation and evolution or creation only be taught in the public schools.
For the anti-creation lobby to still promote the US Supreme Court as being impartial and open-minded is either naive or very misleading.
Answers in Genesis is an apologetics ministry, dedicated to helping Christians defend their faith and proclaim the good news of Jesus Christ.