Yes
whether a state can ban the teaching of evolution in public schools
Because it is important to teach about natural laws which nature follows.
Teachers in Tennessee schools are protected by Law to teach evolution in K-12 settings due to the Academic Freedom Bill passed in the House in 2011 Therefore, Tennessee schools do, in fact, care about science.
There are Catholic schools that are eligible for government grants. This is usually because they teach an approved program or curriculum.
The right to teach evolution in schools
The right to teach evolution in schools
corpus christi catholic sports college is a good school to teach in
Few, most would be Christian/Catholic schools.
Yes, the theory of evolution is an accepted scientific theory and is taught in most schools around the world as part of the science curriculum. It is supported by extensive evidence gathered from various scientific disciplines. However, the extent and manner in which it is taught may vary depending on the educational system and cultural context.
Only in backward theocratic countries. Added: Not in the US.
Not necessarily. For the most part, catholic schools will accept employees that are not catholic, however that employee must still be a strong supporter of the schools goals and vision to be hired.
All rational people. It is not a matter of belief, though, as what manifests itself in the real world, and evolution does that, is not subject to " beliefs " and is true whether you believe it or not. Evolution, the change in allele frequency over time in a population of organisms, is a fact. The theory of evolution by natural selection explains much of this fact. Evolution and the theory of evolution by natural selection is the foundation of biology and it makes little sense not to teach it. The courts have spoken, both at the local and Federal level, so evolution is taught in schools. How rigorously it is taught varies by region. Regardless, science does not adhere to argumentum ad populum.