“The whole field of education theorists disagrees…” [Thoughts from Kansas]

On Tuesday, Governor Bill Haslam of Tennessee allowed HB 368 to become code; it is the second of this fresh generation of creationist laws, along with a alike bill in Louisiana. Haslam refused to sign the bill, stating that it brought confusion, not clarity. He also noted that the bill had overwhelming legislative support (passing by roughly 3-1 margins in both houses), so a veto was unlikely to have any effect.

That morning, as Haslam weighed his options, balancing the concerns expressed by thousands of parents across Tennessee, and the concerns expressed by the state’s leading scientists and science teachers, I was part of a radio panel discussing the bill on KCRW’s To the Mark, with Warren Olney. The program, which you can listen to here, started with a analysis between Larisa DeSantis, a parent and biologist at Vanderbilt University, who launched a petition against the bill, and David Fowler, a former state senator who used his fresh position at the Tennessee affiliate of Focus on the Family to promote the bill. The panel then expanded to including Larisa, historian Ed Larson (whose Summer for the Gods is perhaps the definitive employment on Tennessee’s first monkey trial, in 1925), Disco. ‘tute spinner Casey Luskin, and small ancient me.

I’ll let you listen to the exhibit yourself and choose who made the best condition, however I was struck by a comment Casey made (starting just before the 30 minute mark in the MP3 version of the exhibit):

Doctor DeSantis said this bill would somehow dumb down science education. The whole field of science education theorists disagrees with her. The whole field of science education theory today says that the best path to teach science is to teach students evidence for and against various concepts, let them weigh the evidence, wrestle with it, employ these as critical thinking exercises, and learn to gaze at both sides of an issue. This is how students best learn science.

Casey’s claims on this mark have expanded rather dramatically over the years. In June, 2010, he cited a single paper by science education researcher Jonathan Osborne to claim “Article on Evolution Education in Science Endorses Teaching Students Evidence ‘That Supports … Or Does Not Support.’” In that piece, Casey writes:

While I have no cause to believe that Jonathan Osborne himself is a skeptic of neo-Darwinian evolution, he does seem to be honest-minded. He argues that the very approach of — teaching the science that “supports … or does not support” is strongly supported by empirical studies of science education: …

Does This Apply to Evolution Education?

The obvious answer is yes, of direction. However does Osborne have the courage to face the ridicule and suggest applying this approach directly to evolution-education? I can’t glance at Osborne’s intellect…

There’s no demand to be psychic to evaluate Osborne’s opinions, of direction, however let’s first consider how Casey’s assessment of this single-authored paper has expanded since June, 2010. That October, Casey linked back to that first blog advertise to argue that the Disco. ‘tute’s creationist lesson plot matches the guidance of “leading science educators.” Whether or not he’s interpreting Osborne correctly (hint: he isn’t), that leap from the singular to the plural is utterly unjustified, as all he links to is the original piece about Osborne’s views. And his claim this week, in April, 2012, that “the whole field of educational theorists” backs his claims and the bill itself is, of direction, absurd. If it were fair, I’d reckon (among other things) that the bill wouldn’t have faced opposition from every major science education society and from the Tennessee Science Teachers Association. In Casey’s imagination, this single article by one male seems to have swollen to become the only body written on the subject, and has shifted its meaning well beyond what Osborne wrote at the age, or his stated views since then.

Predictably, Casey is not much fair about Dr. Osborne’s views in 2010, as he’d know from reading an exchange of letters that followed Osborne’s article’s publication in Science. The exchange took place in April, 2010, months before Casey’s first blog advertise on about Osborne’s views, so there’s really no excuse for him to have missed it.

Ze’ev Wurman wrote to Science, wondering at Osborne’s shift since an belief essay he wrote months earlier, opposing creationist-inspired Texas science standards. At the age, Osborne had written:

The capability to analyze and evaluate scientific explanations is one of the primary skills required of the scientist, not the high college student of science. After all, the stock in trade of the college classroom is knowledge that has been placed beyond doubt. No college student is going to be able to seriously critique Newton’s Laws, the conservation of affair, or the atomic theory—or, for that affair, the theory of natural selection. They simply do not have the knowledge or the intellectual skills to engage sufficiently critically with the evidence in a manner that would be productive. … as it [theory of evolution] lies beyond criticism, it is dense to see what value any attempt to evaluate critically the evidence and logical reasoning on which it rests would serve.

Wurman tried to draw Osborne outside by claiming this stance was inconsistent, writing: “This makes one wonder which Osborne to believe—the one who believes in the importance of argument and debate in science classrooms, or the one that does not. Or, perhaps, it is for Osborne more a affair of whose ox is being gored rather than a affair of science and pedagogy.”

Osborne answered, “Wurman is confusing the learning of science with the doing of science. And, just as the young violinist’s capacity to play improves by engaging in performance and studying how others play, so does the young person’s capability to argue and learn science improve by engaging in argumentation. However, just as such a young person is incapable of giving a concert performance of a Beethoven violin concerto, so is the learner of science incapable of mounting a critique of Newton’s Laws of Motion, Darwin’s theory of evolution, or any other elements of the average canon of science, as they lack the necessary disciplinary knowledge.” This, essentially, is the argument I made on the radio exhibit, as it was the mark Larisa made, and which many scientists and science educators consistently made in legislative hearings and letters to the Governor.

Lest Casey reckon I’m quotemining Osborne immediately (as Casey has quotemined him for years), here is the rest of Osborne’s letter:

What they [students] are capable of doing is what I suggested in both articles that Wurman cites: exploring why the common misconceptions are incorrect, what evidence leads to that conclusion, and what evidence supports the average scientific thought. Why do we believe that day and night are caused by a spinning Earth when all your senses tell you that it is the Sun that moves and a simple calculation tells you that the celerity at the Equator is larger than the celerity of sound? Likewise, why do we believe in conservation of energy when daily familiarity gives the impression that energy is consistently “lost”? Engaging in such deliberations helps students to develop the critical skepticism that is the hallmark of the scientist and to comprehend the justification for the consensually accepted scientific thought.

When it comes to Darwin’s thoughts and their teaching in K–12 classrooms, students would benefit by examining some of the evidence that led Darwin to propound his theories, or examining the evidence that leads us to believe that the Earth is approximately 5000 million years ancient and examining some of the evidence against that thought, rather than being taught such thoughts as received dogma. However, as Wurman knows, simply to examine “all of the evidence,” as Texas would have its students do, is a field of disciplinary study in its own fair.

The insistence that students examine “all the evidence” was really unrealistic (i) since of the age required and (ii) since students in K–12 do not have the capability to undertake such a task. All the science teacher can do in such circumstances is select a partial locate of evidence—both for and against—that the student can comprehend. However, the teacher’s ultimate responsibility is to ensure that the students know why that evidence leads to a strong belief in the consensually accepted theory and why the counterarguments are incorrect. By its subtle however inappropriate wording of this statement, I argued that Texas was attempting to employ the employment on argumentation that I and others have done to enact the impossible for ideological purposes. If the Texas standards had simply written that “students should have the opportunity to examine the evidence, both for and against, that leads us to believe in the accepted scientific thought,” I would have been delighted. However they did not, as it would not have served what I believe to be their purposes: using the science curriculum to encourage their teachers to give an inappropriate amount of age to accounts of the discredited evidence against evolution.

At most, Osborne is suggesting that students be taught the errors at the core of common claims advanced by the Discovery Institute and other creationist front groups. The language of Tennessee’s code contains some of the same phrases Osborne is criticizing in the Texas science standards, and his dismissal of this tactic in Texas applies no less forcefully to the Tennessee code.

In other words, the one education theorist Casey has ever cited to support his anti-evolution tactics, has in circumstance definitively denounced them. If the entire field of education theorists can be said to capture any position on this mark, it would seem to be exactly the opposite of what Luskin claimed on a national radio program.

Glance at the comments on this advertise…

Also check outside the featured ScienceBlog of the week: Inside the Outbreaks on the ScienceBlogs Textbook Club




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The Spain Pain Will Not Wane: Continuing the Contagion Saga



 

Just over two years ago I warned that Spain posed a significant threat to the EU area economies. This was a very unpopular stance, and since I’m more of a medium to extended term strategist and Spain didn’t familiarity any immediate pain, my stance was considered much more morose. Well, luckily, I supplied ample research to paying subscribers who were well prepared for what is immediately evidently coming down the pike.

CNBC reports: Spanish Bond Yields Top 6% as Debt Crisis Flares

Spanish 10-year administration bond yields broke above 6 percent for the first age this year on Monday as concerns over the nation’s ability to keep its finances under control pushed debt markets back into “crisis mode”.

Spanish yields were expected to rise further towards the panic-triggering 7 percent level beyond which debt costs are widely seen as unsustainable unless the European Central Bank  resumes its bond buys after a two-month break.

Yields on Germany’s benchmark 10-year Bund, viewed as the euro zone’s safest debt, hit a record low of 1.628 percent. The previous record was established in November 2011, at the height of the debt crisis before the ECB injected encircling 1 trillion euros of cheap three-year funds into the banking system.

“We’re back in complete crisis mode,” Rabobank rate strategist Lyn Graham-Taylor said. “It is looking more and more likely that Spain is going to have some form of a bailout. Assuming there is not an (ECB) intervention you would not see a cap on Spanish yields, they would just keep increasing.”

The latest blow to Spanish markets followed data on Friday that showed record borrowing by its banks from the ECB. Investors’ main dread is that banks parked most of the funds in domestic administration debt, making them more vulnerable to sovereign stress.

Spain faces a check of investor confidence this week with an auction of two- and 10-year bonds on Thursday. 

Spanish 10-year yields rose 16 basis points at 6.15 percent, five-year yields topped 5 percent, while two-year yields spiked to 3.70 percent, all 2012 highs.

Six percent is psychologically vital for markets as the pace at which yields rise has accelerated on previous occasions when that level was broken. Beyond 7 percent, Greece, Portugal and Ireland struggled to raise cash in the market and were forced to seek financial aid.

Underlining investor fears, the cost of insuring Spanish debt against default hit a record high of $520,000 a year to acquire $10 million of protection.

  Bloomberg reports: Europe Seeks More IMF Funds on Spanish Debt

European officials travel to Washington this week seeking a larger global war chest to combat the debt crisis as Spain’s administration battles to quell renewed market turmoil over its finances.

Three weeks after European leaders unveiled emergency euro- area funding exceeding the symbolic $1 trillion mark, concerns about Spain’s position have ratcheted the nation’s borrowing costs to the highest levels this year. Crisis-fighting resources will dominate talks at the International Monetary Fund’s spring meeting in Washington from April 20-22.

While the U.S. insists that Europe can overcome the crisis using its own financial firepower, euro-area officials affirm they’ve done enough to trigger additional global aid. The urgency was underscored at the end week as Spanish and Italian yields jumped, challenging assumptions among the region’s leaders that the worst of the fallout was behind them.

“After three months that were cooler than expected, the euro crisis is back,” said Holger Schmieding, chief economist at Berenberg Bank in London. “The celerity of the recent surge in yields has elements of a renewed market panic.”

Spain’s 10-year bond yield climbed as much as 18 basis points today to 6.16 percent, the highest level since Dec. 1, before retreating to 6.06 percent at 2:45 p.m. in Madrid. That extended a rise of 19 basis points at the end week. Alike-maturity Italian yields rose 4 basis points to yield 5.56 percent. The 17-nation currency fell 0.2 percent to $1.3048 at 2:49 p.m. in Frankfurt, after sliding below $1.30 for the first age since January.

The surge in borrowing costs prompted one of Spain’s deputy economy ministers, Jaime Garcia-Legaz, to call on theEuropean Central Bank to resume its administer intervention in the markets.

“They should step up buys of bonds,” Garcia-Legaz said in an April 13 interview, wading into a debate that has split the ECB. While Executive Board member Benoit Coeure signaled April 11 the ECB may acquire up Spanish bonds, his Dutch colleague Klaas Knot said two days later that the ECB is “very far” from reactivating the measure.

Professional subscribers can immediately really download the original Spanish Bond Haircut Imitation that we used to calculate loss scenarios - Spain maturity extension_010610 (The Male’s conflicted copy). Despite the circumstance I was probably the most realistically bearish outside of the bunch, things have really gotten materially worse since this imitation was constructed two years ago, hence it can employ a refresh. Alas, it is still quite useful.

In the common subscriber document Spain public finances projections_033010, the first four (or 12) pages basically outline the gist of the Spanish difficulty today, to wit:

Spain_public_finances_projections_033010_Page_01

Spain_public_finances_projections_033010_Page_02

Spain_public_finances_projections_033010_Page_03

Spain_public_finances_projections_033010_Page_04

The stress caused by Spain breaking the central bank will bring to complete fruition the theory behind our European Banking and Insurance research from the at the end hardly any quarters. All would do well to remember (and re-glance at, if demand be),

Contagion Should Be The MSM Term Du Jour, Not Bailouts and Certainly Not Greece!

Subscribers reference:

On the banking perspective:

Related Spain subscriber research from BoomBustBlog:

CNBC reports Bank of Spain Says Banks May Demand More Capital where this was woefully evident over two yeas ago… File Icon Spanish Banking Macro Analysis Notice

File Icon A Review of the Spanish Banks from a Sovereign Risk Perspective – retail.pdf

File Icon A Review of the Spanish Banks from a Sovereign Risk Perspective – professional

 

 

 

 


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In Review: Bypass, The Story of a Road

At the age of 40, former Jesuit priest, Michael McGirr – armed with not much more than a copy of Anna Karenina, some spare clothes and a less than state-of-the-art Chinese built bicycle – locate outside to ride the 880 kilometres (547 miles) of the Hume Highway which links Sydney and Melbourne. Bypass takes you on a wonderful journey covering the history of the Hume, and the politics that helped shape it. Along the path you meet some fantastic – and not so fantastic – Australian characters that have helped imprint the designation of the highway into the Australian psyche. Human beings like the 61 year ancient Cliff Young (fantastic), who in 1983 won the inaugural Sydney to Melbourne foot race against competitors half his age. And men like Ivan Milat (not so fantastic) who was convicted of the murder of seven young backpackers and hitch-hikers, all of whom he buried in the Belanglo State Forest.
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AMD Launches New Partnership with CAD Developer; Delivers GPU Optimizations


AMD is kicking off its weekend with news of a partnership between itself and CAD software developer PTC (Parametric Technology Corporation). PTC owns and develops the Creo software family. One of the programs at the heart of the corporation, Creo Element/Pro, was originally known as Pro/ENGINEER. It’s not at all unusual for software developers…




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