Christ-denying lie-berals are using their stranglehold on academia to engage in politically correct censorship of anything that contradicts their Darwinista monkey cult.
Presumably liberal-biased source:
Can you believe such rubbish? Some lie-beral educrat with a Messy-can't last name says that telling the truth would "fail to prepare students adequately" to brainwash our precious children into the evil-utionist deathstyle choice. The Darwinistas know that they can't win on the merits, since so many people in the Godly red states prefer God's truth over Darwinian lies, so they stifle anyone who disagrees with them.
Presumably liberal-biased source:
Creation institute's proposal rejected by panel
Master's curriculum is not science, higher education commissioner says.
A Bible-oriented group's proposal to offer an online master's degree in science education was unanimously rejected Wednesday by a panel of the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board.
The action by the board's Academic Excellence and Research Committee came after Higher Education Commissioner Raymund Paredes recommended against the proposal, submitted by the Dallas-based Institute for Creation Research. The full coordinating board is scheduled to consider the matter today.
Paredes said the institute's plan is infused with creationism and runs counter to conventions of science, which hold that claims of supernatural intervention are not testable and therefore lie outside the realm of science. He also said that the institute, by insisting on a literal interpretation of biblical creation, would fail to prepare students adequately for the field of science education.
Master's curriculum is not science, higher education commissioner says.
A Bible-oriented group's proposal to offer an online master's degree in science education was unanimously rejected Wednesday by a panel of the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board.
The action by the board's Academic Excellence and Research Committee came after Higher Education Commissioner Raymund Paredes recommended against the proposal, submitted by the Dallas-based Institute for Creation Research. The full coordinating board is scheduled to consider the matter today.
Paredes said the institute's plan is infused with creationism and runs counter to conventions of science, which hold that claims of supernatural intervention are not testable and therefore lie outside the realm of science. He also said that the institute, by insisting on a literal interpretation of biblical creation, would fail to prepare students adequately for the field of science education.
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