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  1. Eugenie Carol Scott (born October 24, 1945) is an American physical anthropologist who has been active in opposing the teaching of young Earth creationism and intelligent design in schools. She coined the term " Gish gallop " to describe a fallacious rhetorical technique of overwhelming an interlocutor with as many individually weak ...

  2. Sep 2, 2013 · Eugenie C. Scott, longtime director of the National Center for Science Education, has spent a career beating back efforts to teach creationism in schools across America.

  3. Oct 4, 2018 · Eugenie Scott, founding executive director of the National Center for Science Education Understanding, explores how this role is essential in comprehending — much less mediating — this persistent conflict.

  4. Jun 18, 2008 · Eugenie Scott brings to bear her encyclopedic knowledge of the history of the conflict, passion for the subject, and deep understanding of the legal framework tempered by her long involvement as Executive Director of the National Center for Science Education.

  5. Oct 4, 2018 · Eugenie Scott: Thank you. You know, it really is such a high honor to be invited to be a Hitchcock Lecturer. It is just when I got the letter, I was just blown away.

  6. Jan 22, 2016 · Eugenie Scott is a physical and biological anthropologist, and one of the country’s leading advocates in the fight to keep Young Earth creationism and intell...

  7. Jun 5, 2009 · As executive director of the California-based National Center for Science Education, anthropologist Eugenie Scott has spent the past 2 decades on the frontlines of the contentious battle over teaching evolution in U.S. public schools.

  8. Eugenie C. Scott is Executive Director of the National Center for Science Education. She has written extensively on the evolution-creationism controversy and is past president of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists.

  9. Oct 15, 2014 · If advocate and anthropologist Eugenie Scott hadn’t spent so much of her life as executive director of the National Center for Science Education (NCSE) leading a national campaign to defend the integrity of science in our public schools, perhaps she might have been a standup comedian.

  10. Eugenie Scott, a former anthropology professor, is the former Executive Director of NCSE. She has been both a researcher and an activist in the creationism/evolution controversy for over twenty-five years, tackling educational, legal, scientific, religious, and social issues.