An Appeal Against Exclusion of Evolution from Curriculum
We, the undersigned, have learned that sweeping changes are being proposed in the CBSE curriculum in the secondary and senior secondary courses. These changes, first introduced as a temporary measure during the Corona pandemic, are being continued even when schooling has gone back to offline mode. In particular, we are concerned with the exclusion of the teaching of Darwinian evolution from the 10th standard curriculum, as seen in the information (see https://ncert.nic.in/pdf/BookletClass10.pdf, page 21) available on the NCERT website.
In the current educational structure, only a small fraction of students choose the science stream in grade 11 or 12, and an even smaller fraction of those choose biology as one of the subjects of study. Thus, the exclusion of key concepts from the curriculum till grade 10 amounts to a vast majority of students missing a critical part of essential learning in this field.
Knowledge and understanding of evolutionary biology is important not just to any subfield of biology, but is also key to understanding the world around us. Evolutionary biology is an area of science with a huge impact on how we choose to deal with an array of problems we face as societies and nations from medicine and drug discovery, epidemiology, ecology and environment, to psychology, and it also addresses our understanding of humans and their place in the tapestry of life. Although many of us do not explicitly realise, the principles of natural selection help us understand how any pandemic progresses or why certain species go extinct, among many other critical issues..
An understanding of the process of evolution is also crucial in building a scientific temper and a rational worldview. The way Darwin’s painstaking observations and his keen insights led him to the theory of natural selection educates students about the process of science and the importance of critical thinking. Depriving students, who do not go on to study biology after the 10th standard, of any exposure to this vitally important field is a travesty of education.
We, the undersigned scientists, science teachers, educators, and science popularisers disagree with such dangerous changes in school science education and demand to restore the theory of Darwinian evolution in secondary education.
Aniket Sule, Mumbai
Ragavendra Gadagkar, Bengaluru
Amitabha Joshi, Bengaluru
L. S. Shashidhara, Bengaluru
T. N. C. Vidya, Bengaluru
Enakshi Bhattacharya, Chennai
Rahul Siddharthan, Chennai
D. Indumathi, Chennai
Amitabha Pandey, Delhi
Ram Ramswamy, Delhi
T. V. Venkateswaran, Delhi
Anindita Bhadra, Kolkata
Soumitro Bannerjee, Kolkata
S. Krishnaswamy, Madurai
N. G. Prasad, Mohali
Aurnab Ghose, Pune
Satyajeet Rath, Pune
Shraddha Kumbhojkar, Pune
Sudha Rajamani, Pune
Vineeta Bal, Pune
and 1000 others
[Those who want to endorse the above appeal and add their names can do so here ]