“It’s that fundamental to biology.” The periodic table explains how life’s building blocks combine to generate substances with vastly different properties, he adds, and “is one of the great intellectual achievements of chemists”. “Anybody who’s trying to teach biology without dealing with evolution is not teaching biology as we currently understand it,” says Jonathan Osborne, a science-education researcher at Stanford University in California. Researchers, including those who study science education, are shocked. The extent of what has changed became clearer last month when the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) - the public body that develops the Indian school curriculum and textbooks - released textbooks for the new academic year that started in May. Overall, the changes affect some 134 million 11–18-year-olds in India’s schools. 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. 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. 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. 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. Will future students be able to exhibit the periodic table? Credit: Noah Seelam/AFP/Getty National Science Day at St Thomas School in Secunderabad, India, in February.
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