Teach the Controversy The CSC's Teach the Controversy campaign seeks to promote the teaching of "the full range of scientific views" on evolution on "unresolved issues" and the "scientific weaknesses of evolutionary theory." Critics of the CSC's campaign say that they have manufactured the controversy and that they promote the false perception that evolution is "in crisis" and is a "dying theory." The strategy has been to move from standards battles, to curriculum writing, to textbook adoption, all the while undermining the central positions of evolution in biology and methodological naturalism in science. The CSC is the primary organizer and promoter of the Teach the Controversy campaign. Examples of Teach the Controversy in action were the
Kansas evolution hearings, the Santorum Amendment,
2002 Ohio Board of Education intelligent design controversy, and the
Dover Area School District intelligent design controversy. The CSC believe that the program and curricula they advocate presents evidence both for and against evolution and then encourages students to evaluate the arguments themselves. Casting the conflicting points of view and agendas as an academic and scholarly controversy was proposed by Phillip E. Johnson of the Discovery Institute in his book
The Wedge of Truth: Splitting the Foundations of Naturalism (2000). In his book, he writes of the 1999–2000 Kansas evolution hearings controversy over the teaching of intelligent design in public school classrooms: "What educators in Kansas and elsewhere should be doing is to 'teach the controversy.'" In its early years, the CSC (then called the CRSC) offered science curriculum that assured teachers that its "Web curriculum can be appropriated without textbook adoption wars." This had the net effect of encouraging ID sympathetic teachers to side-step standard textbook adoption procedures. Anticipating a test case, Discovery Institute director Stephen C. Meyer along with David K. DeWolf and Mark Edward DeForrest published in the
Utah Law Review a legal strategy for winning judicial sanction. According to published reports, the nonprofit Discovery Institute spends more than $1 million
USD a year for research, polls, lobbying and media pieces that support intelligent design and their Teach the Controversy strategy. In August 2005,
The New York Times reported that since 2004 there have been 78 campaigns in 31 states to either Teach the Controversy or include intelligent design in science curricula, twice the number seen in 2002–2003. CSC-recommended curricula benefits from special status at number of religious schools.
Biola University and
Oklahoma Baptist University are listed on the
Access Research Network website as "ID Colleges." In addition, the
Intelligent Design and Evolution Awareness Center (IDEA), which began as a student organization at the
University of California, San Diego, helps establish student IDEA clubs on university and high school campuses. The Intelligent Design and Undergraduate Research Center, ARN's student division, also recruits and supports followers at universities. Campus youth ministries play an active role in bringing ID to university campuses through lectures by ID leaders Phillip E. Johnson, William A. Dembski,
Jonathan Wells, Michael Behe, and others. This activity takes place outside university science departments. Several public universities, including the
University of California, Berkeley, and the
University of New Mexico have had intelligent design often as freshman seminars, honors courses, and other courses outside required curricula in which instructors have wider latitude regarding course content.
Research fellowships The CSC offers fellowships of up to $60,000 a year for "support of significant and original research in the natural sciences, the history and philosophy of science, cognitive science and related fields." Published reports state that the CSC has awarded $3.6 million in fellowships of $5,000 to $60,000 per year to 50 researchers since its founding in 1996. Among the center's publications are 50 books on intelligent design, such as those by William A. Dembski, and two documentary films,
Unlocking the Mystery of Life (2003) and
The Privileged Planet (2004), the later based on the book of the same name written by senior fellows
Jay W. Richards and
Guillermo Gonzalez. Since its founding in 1996, the CSC has spent 39 percent of its $9.3 million on research according to Meyer, underwriting books or papers, or often just paying universities to release professors from some teaching responsibilities so that they can ponder intelligent design. Over those nine years, $792,585 was spent to finance laboratory or field research in biology, paleontology, or biophysics, while $93,828 was spent to help graduate students in paleontology, linguistics, history, and philosophy. The results of this are found in Discovery Institute-authored science class curricula, "model lesson plans", which are at the center of many of the
current debates about including intelligent design in public school science classes. CSC promotes these, urging states and school boards to include criticism of evolution science lessons, and to "
Teach the Controversy", rather than actually teach intelligent design which is susceptible to legal challenges on
First Amendment grounds. ==
Science & Culture Today ==