NCSE is pleased to announce that the latest issue of Reports of the National Center for Science Education is now available on-line. The issue — volume 36, number 3 — is the third issue in the newsletter's new, streamlined, and full-color format.
Featured are "Defending Darwin in Kentucky," James J. Krupa's report on his decades of teaching evolution in the Bluegrass State; Randy Moore's discussion of a creationist "museum" in Crosbyton, Texas; news about NCSE's outreach projects from Minda Berbeco and Emily Schoerning; and a review of Gordon H. Orians's Snakes, Sunrise, and Shakespeare by Nancy Easterlin.
The entire issue is freely available in PDF form from http://reports.ncse.com. Members of NCSE will have already received the issue in the mail, and will be receiving the next issue of Reports in September 2016. (Not a member? Join today!)