I hope Kevin Drum won’t mind too much if I blatantly steal borrow his post from this afternoon, but this Chronicle of Higher Education piece is simply breathtaking.
The U.S. Department of Education has a new federal grant program, called “Smart Grants,” which are geared towards rewarding students majoring in engineering, mathematics, science, or certain foreign languages. Unfortunately, if your field of study happens to be evolutionary biology, you may experience some trouble receiving funding.
The department has an index of classification numbers — referred to as “CIP codes,” for the Classification of Instructional Programs — for all academic areas of instruction,
Under that classification scheme, there is a heading for “Ecology, Evolution, Systematics and Population Biology,” under which 10 biological fields are defined. For instance, ecology is 26.1301, and evolutionary biology is 26.1303.
But on a list that defines majors eligible for the grants, issued by the department in May, one of those 10 is missing. On that list, the classification numbers rise in order from 26.1301 to 26.1309 — with the exception of a blank line where 26.1303, or evolutionary biology, would fall.
Lawrence Krauss, a physics professor at Case Western Reserve University (and, full disclosure, someone I’ve talked to on a series of occasions), described this as “a serious omission,” but added, “I’m not making any accusations.”
Can I?
Officials from the Department of Education who could comment on the matter were not available, but a spokeswoman said she suspected that the absence of evolutionary biology was a “clerical consolidation of some kind,” and that evolution might fall under other topics.
Given the administration’s track record on evolution, and on science in general, I’m afraid we’re well past giving the administration the benefit of the doubt.
I mean really. Ten lines between 26.1301 to 26.1309 — and one specific blank line where evolutionary biology should be? From an administration led by a man who openly questions modern science? A “clerical consolidation”?
Please.