Prevalence of Student Dissection-Choice Policies in U.S. Schools

Author:

Suiter Samantha1,Oakley Jan2,Goodman Justin3

Affiliation:

1. SAMANTHA SUITER is the Science Education Specialist at People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), 501 Front St., Norfolk, VA 23510, and is a Biology Professor at Trident Technical College, 7000 Rivers Ave., North Charleston, SC 29406; e-mail for correspondence: samanthas@peta.org.

2. JAN OAKLEY is on the Faculty of Education, Lakehead University, 120 Windemere Ave. N., Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada P7A 6B4; e-mail: joakley@lakeheadu.ca.

3. JUSTIN GOODMAN is the Director of Government Relations at PETA, 1536 16th St. NW, Washington, DC 20036, and teaches in the Department of Sociology at Marymount University, 2807 N. Glebe Rd., Arlington, VA; e-mail: justing@peta.org.

Abstract

Although animal dissection is common in classrooms, growing concerns for animal welfare and advances in nonanimal teaching methods have prompted the creation of policies that allow students to choose humane alternatives to classroom animal use. We assessed the prevalence and content of policies that allow students to opt out of animal dissection in states and large public school districts across the United States – data that have not previously been collected or analyzed. We found that such policies exist at the state level in 22 states (plus the District of Columbia) and in many large public school districts in the other remaining states. These data illustrate that at least 63% of students in U.S. public schools have access to some kind of dissection choice, although the content of these policies varies widely. We discuss these results and recommend components of a comprehensive student dissection-choice policy.

Publisher

University of California Press

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous),Education

Reference66 articles.

1. Almy, J., Goldsmith, M.L. & Patronek, G.J. (2001). Dissection in Massachusetts classrooms: correlation of gender, teacher attitudes, and conscientious objection. [Report.] West Barnstable, MA: Cape Wildlife Center.

2. American Anti-Vivisection Society (2015). Student choice laws. Available at http://aavs.org/animals-science/laws/student-choice-laws/.

3. American School and University (2014). 2014 AS&U 100: Largest school districts in the U.S. by enrollment, 2012–13. Available at http://asumag.com/research/2014-asu-100-largest-school-districts-us-enrollment-2012–13.

4. Anchorage School District (2011, December15). Personal communication: survey response to researcher.

5. Arizona State Legislature (2014). 15–102. Parental involvement in the school; definition. Available at http://www.azleg.gov/FormatDocument.asp?inDoc=/ars/15/00102.htm&Title=15&DocType=ARS.

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