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A tentative vote in Texas is expected later this week, but the board is not expected to make a final decision on the curriculum proposal until March. Much of Wednesday's testimony focused on the scientific evidence of evolution. "I hope you understand now that there are good reasons to think that, yes, evolution has weaknesses that reasonable people can see, that, yes, those weaknesses do really influence the theory," said Ralph Seelke, a biology professor at the University of Wisconsin-Superior, who served on the review panel. Eugenie Scott, executive director of the California-based National Center for Science Education, said the proposal to drop the inclusion of weaknesses is a "superior critical thinking standard." "Abandoning the inaccurate strengths and weaknesses language does not encourage the singling out of evolution for special treatment," Scott said.
[Associated
Press;
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