In India, children under 16 returning to school this month at the start of the school year will no longer be taught about evolution, the periodic table of elements or sources of energy.

The news that evolution would be cut from the curriculum for students aged 15–16 was widely reported last month, when thousands of people signed a petition in protest. But official guidance has revealed that a chapter on the periodic table will be cut, too, along with other foundational topics such as sources of energy and environmental sustainability. Younger learners will no longer be taught certain pollution- and climate-related topics, and there are cuts to biology, chemistry, geography, mathematics and physics subjects for older school students.

Overall, the changes affect some 134 million 11–18-year-olds in India’s schools.

Researchers, including those who study science education, are shocked.

Mythili Ramchand, a science-teacher trainer at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences in Mumbai, India, says that “everything related to water, air pollution, resource management has been removed. “I don’t see how conservation of water, and air [pollution], is not relevant for us. It’s all the more so currently,” she adds. A chapter on different sources of energy — from fossil fuels to renewables — has also been removed. “That’s a bit strange, quite honestly, given the relevance in today’s world,” says Osborne.

More than 4,500 scientists, teachers and science communicators have signed an appeal organized by Breakthrough Science Society, a campaign group based in Kolkata, India, to reinstate the axed content on evolution.

NCERT has not responded to the appeal. And although it relied on expert committees to oversee the changes, it has not yet engaged with parents and teachers to explain its rationale for making them. NCERT also did not reply to Nature’s request for comment.

Chapters closed

A chapter on the periodic table of elements has been removed from the syllabus for class-10 students, who are typically 15–16 years old. Whole chapters on sources of energy and the sustainable management of natural resources have also been removed.

In non-science content, chapters on democracy and diversity; political parties; and challenges to democracy have been scrapped. And a chapter on the industrial revolution has been removed for older students.

In explaining its changes, NCERT states on its website that it considered whether content overlapped with similar content covered elsewhere, the difficulty of the content, and whether the content was irrelevant. It also aims to provide opportunities for experiential learning and creativity.

NCERT announced the cuts last year, saying that they would ease pressures on students studying online during the COVID-19 pandemic. Amitabh Joshi, an evolutionary biologist at Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research in Bengaluru, India, says that science teachers and researchers expected that the content would be reinstated once students returned to classrooms. Instead, the NCERT shocked everyone by printing textbooks for the new academic year with a statement that the changes will remain for the next two academic years, in line with India’s revised education policy approved by government in July 2020.

“The idea [behind the new policy] is that you make students ask questions,” says Anindita Bhadra, an evolutionary biologist at the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research in Kolkata. But she says that removing fundamental concepts is likely to stifle curiosity, rather than encourage it. “The way this is being done, by saying ‘drop content and teach less’”, she says, “that’s not the way you do it”.

Evolution axed

Science educators are particularly concerned about the removal of evolution. A chapter on diversity in living organisms and one called ‘Why do we fall ill’ has been removed from the syllabus for class-9 students, who are typically 14–15 years old. Darwin’s contributions to evolution, how fossils form and human evolution have all been removed from the chapter on heredity and evolution for class-10 pupils. That chapter is now called just ‘Heredity’. Evolution, says Joshi, is essential to understanding human diversity and “our place in the world”.

In India, class 10 is the last year in which science is taught to every student. Only students who elect to study biology in the final two years of education (before university) will learn about the topic.

Joshi says that the curriculum revision process has lacked transparency. But in the case of evolution, “more religious groups in India are beginning to take anti-evolution stances”, he says. Some members of the public also think that evolution lacks relevance outside academic institutions.

Aditya Mukherjee, a historian at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Dehli, says that changes to the curriculum are being driven by Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), a mass-membership volunteer organization that has close ties to India’s governing Bharatiya Janata Party. The RSS feels that Hinduism is under threat from India’s other religions and cultures.

“There is a movement away from rational thinking, against the enlightenment and Western ideas” in India, adds Sucheta Mahajan, a historian at Jawaharlal Nehru University who collaborates with Mukherjee on studies of RSS influence on school texts. Evolution conflicts with creation stories, adds Mukherjee. History is the main target, but “science is one of the victims”, she adds.

  • daisy
    ·
    2 years ago

    For all the Catholic church's many many many many shitty actions and many many many many flaws, at least support for evolution and the big bang are official policy straight from the pope's own office.

    • stinky [any]
      hexagon
      ·
      2 years ago

      Huh. How do they square it with the Bible?

      • daisy
        ·
        2 years ago

        The short version is they don't bother trying, and they don't bother pretending to try. The Catholic church's unofficially-official attitude towards the Old Testament is that most of it, especially the early stuff, is metaphorical nonsense and not to be taken literally. Genesis is especially downplayed. Rote Bible-memorization studies aren't really a thing in the modern Catholic tradition.

        • stinky [any]
          hexagon
          ·
          2 years ago

          So it’s the Protestants that are, ironically, behind the times.

        • GreenTeaRedFlag [any]
          ·
          2 years ago

          It's not nonsense, it's spiritually true, not factually. So when we read the creation stories, we think the point is that everything ultimately comes from God, no matter how it specifically came to be, and that everything is fundamentally good, because God looked out on his creation and saw that it was good.

          The real crazy nonsense is revelations. We try to ignore it for the most part.

          • daisy
            ·
            2 years ago

            It’s not nonsense, it’s spiritually true, not factually.

            Well, that's the awkward public phrasing used to avoid having to excise the nuttier parts of the Old Testament entirely and dealing with the resulting embarrassment. But the unspoken part is "Please focus on the New Testament and our official interpretation of it, and whenever science conflicts with the Old Testament, feel free to use your own judgment."

            • GreenTeaRedFlag [any]
              ·
              2 years ago

              we literally still read from the old testament every Sunday. There's definitely a stronger emphasis on the gospels, but the old testament gets honestly more focus than the non-gospel books of the new testament. We talk about Moses and Abraham all the time.

          • BeamBrain [he/him]
            ·
            2 years ago

            The real crazy nonsense is revelations. We try to ignore it for the most part.

            Very reasonable, not ignoring it is how you get Rapture weirdos

      • GreenTeaRedFlag [any]
        ·
        2 years ago

        In the early twentieth century, the pope realized we had fumbled when we put Galileo under house arrest, so we moved to the stance that the Bible is a book of religious truth, not factual. King David may or may not have existed, but we can learn about how God interacts with us, and how to use power without abusing it, from his story. The story of Moses and the jews escaping slavery, wandering for 40 years, and eventually settling in the promised land is understood to prefigure communion and Jesus freeing us from sin. For the creation stories, we take it that everything ultimately comes from God, evolution is just part of the process. The most important thing is that God looked out at creation and saw that it was good.

        A lot of emphasis is also put on comparing it to Mesopotamian or Greek world origin stories, which are full of bloodshed and fathers hurting their children and subjugation. Here, God carefully and lovingly makes every part of the world, and is truly in control without contest. He makes us from clay, not from the shit and blood of His enemies, and the world isn't the corpse of a slain enemy. Other early stories are similar, Noah and the flood prefigures baptism, cane and able is about how sin spreads through a community, Abraham is all about trusting in God no matter what. There's a lot you get out of the stories once you stop thinking they are literally true.

        The really batshit we ignore is revelations. It's just a cryptic metaphor for Rome, not sure why we kept it.

        • daisy
          ·
          2 years ago

          The really batshit we ignore is revelations. It’s just a cryptic metaphor for Rome, not sure why we kept it.

          When I was semi-observant in my teens, I asked the parish priest about Revelations. Fortunately he was a Jesuit. It led to a really great conversation about the actual history of why certain books were chosen to be kept in the early days of the church. He never talked down to me, even though I was a know-it-all snot-nosed kid.

          I mostly left the church because I just couldn't square their stance on LGBT+ issues, and the ugly history of widespread sexual abuse and the related coverups. One of which was a really big one in my parent's home parish of the time, like "national news for years," big. But I still respect the Jesuits. All the ones I've personally met are smart and honourable men. And the history of science is replete with Jesuit scientists making major discoveries.

          • GreenTeaRedFlag [any]
            ·
            2 years ago

            jesuits are usually cool. I really hope the church improves in those two areas soon.