Meet Zack Kopplin, the 19-year-old who started winning battles against teaching creationism in Louisiana public schools when he was 14
IO9 profiles Zack Kopplin, a 19-year-old, five-year veteran of the fight
against teaching creationism in Louisiana's science classes. Kopplin
was a student when the a law came into effect allowing teachers to
bring creationist material to class, and he took up the cause, winning a
battle that prevented the exclusion of evolution from Louisiana science
classes altogether. Kopplin has been vilified by state legislators and
creationists, but refuses to give up the fight. If I can raise a kid
with this much sense, savvy, passion and ethical commitment, I'll
consider my life to have been worthwhile:
He also has his eyes set on vouchers. After an Alternet story came out
about a school in the Louisiana voucher program teaching that the Loch
Ness Monster was real and disproved evolution, Kopplin looked deeper
into the program and found that this wasn't just one school, but at
least 19 other schools, too.
School vouchers, he argues, unconstitutionally fund the teaching of
creationism because many of the schools in these programs are private
fundamentalist religious schools who are teaching creationism.
"These schools have every right to teach whatever they want — no matter
how much I disagree with it — as long as they are fully private," he
says. "But when they take public money through vouchers, these schools
need to be accountable to the public in the same way that public schools
are and they must abide by the same rules." Kopplin is hoping for more
transparency in these programs so the public can see what is being
taught with taxpayers' money.
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