Skip to main content

Articles

Page 9 of 14

  1. As outlined in the introductory article “The Neverending Story—Using the Narrative as a Fundamental Approach to Teaching Biology and Beyond,” historical storytelling has the potential to add understanding and ...

    Authors: Marcus Kumala
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 6:A1
  2. For many years, the creationist movement in Poland was so marginal that the term “creationism” and its foundations were largely unknown within society. Nevertheless, at the end of the 1980s and beginning of th...

    Authors: Bartosz Borczyk
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:292
  3. The question “If humans evolved from monkeys, why are there still monkeys?” reveals a widespread and persistent misconception about the process and pattern of evolution. The concept of “cousins” is central to ...

    Authors: William Eric Meikle and Eugenie C. Scott
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:293
  4. The University of Arizona’s Tree of Life Web Project organizes information about the biological taxa on the model of the tree of life itself. This creates intuitive and informative pathways for browsing. The P...

    Authors: Adam M. Goldstein
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:288
  5. High school biology is typically taught with an emphasis on human biology. The human body is broken down into distinct systems without regard to the origins of its parts. As a result, students are left with th...

    Authors: Marcus Kumala
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:276
  6. Authors: Niles Eldredge and Greg Eldredge
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:291
  7. Giambattista Brocchi’s (1814) monograph (see Dominici, Evo Edu Outreach, this issue, 2010) on the Tertiary fossils of the Subappenines in Italy—and their relation to the living molluscan fauna—contains a theoreti...

    Authors: Stefano Dominici and Niles Eldredge
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:280
  8. While numerous studies address college students’ (typically biology majors) perceptions of evolution, research on how students from a range of majors view intelligent design (ID) has not been conducted. In thi...

    Authors: Craig Tollini and Jess White
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:271
  9. The Tree of Life is the result of the interplay of changes in information and speciation. Almost 100 years after publication of Darwin’s Origin, the inception of Phylogenetic Systematics has resulted in a revolut...

    Authors: Edward O. Wiley
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:279
  10. The Italian geologist Giambattista Brocchi (1771–1826) is presented as a key figure in the historical period preceding young Charles Darwin’s first work on transmutational theory while on the Beagle. The brief...

    Authors: Stefano Dominici
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:270
  11. The future of the world’s biodiversity involves preservation of individual species and, more importantly, preservation of the natural process by which the biosphere is populated. Inherited history allows speci...

    Authors: Daniel R. Brooks and Deborah A. McLennan
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:269
  12. Dramatic headlines touting new fossil discoveries often proclaim that our view of human evolution has been revolutionized. While this is occasionally the case, it is more often true that new fossils enrich our...

    Authors: W. Eric Meikle and Andrew J. Petto
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:267
  13. The genetic material, deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), contains information about the evolutionary history of life. Both the relationships amongst organisms and the times of their divergence can be inferred from D...

    Authors: Jason A. Hodgson and Todd R. Disotell
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:262
  14. Molecular and paleontological evidence now point to the last common ancestor between chimpanzees and modern humans living between five and seven million years ago. Any species considered to be more closely rel...

    Authors: William H. E. Harcourt-Smith
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:257
  15. The origin of the genus Homo in Africa signals the beginning of the shift from increasingly bipedal apes to primitive, large-brained, stone tool-making, meat-eaters that traveled far and wide. This early part of ...

    Authors: Holly M. Dunsworth
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:247
  16. The National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) organizes information resources for life scientists on an evolutionary scheme. This facilitates research about present-day organisms. The recent discove...

    Authors: Adam M. Goldstein
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:258
  17. Authors: Niles Eldredge and Gregory Eldredge
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:266
  18. Research into the deep history of the human species is a relatively young science which can be divided into two broad periods. The first spans the century between the publication of Darwin’s Origin and the end of...

    Authors: Tom Gundling
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:248
  19. Evolution is the unifying principle of all biology, and understanding how evolutionary relationships are represented is critical for a complete understanding of evolution. Phylogenetic trees are the most conve...

    Authors: Richard P. Meisel
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:254
  20. The australopiths are a group of early hominins (humans and their close extinct relatives) that lived in Africa between approximately 4.1 and 1.4 million years ago. Formerly known as the australopithecines, th...

    Authors: David S. Strait
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:249
  21. Archaeology is the study of human behavior through material culture, the things we rely on for survival. Behavioral change was likely a driving factor in the evolution of our species, and archaeology therefore...

    Authors: Christian Tryon, Briana Pobiner and Rhonda Kauffman
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:246
  22. At the heart of debates among creationists and evolutionists are questions about scientific integrity and rigor. Creationists often justify their rejection of biological evolution by claiming that the methodol...

    Authors: Finn R. Pond and Jean L. Pond
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:242
  23. Human beings are distinguished most strikingly by their unique “symbolic” way of processing information about the world. Although based on a long evolutionary history, the modern human cognitive style is not p...

    Authors: Ian Tattersall
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:241
  24. The National Science Education Standards (NSES) is one of the most influential documents in US science education. The NSES has been utilized by local schools and districts, state departments of education, and ...

    Authors: Ron Wagler
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:240
  25. Half of US respondents to the 2006 General Social Surveys did not believe in the “Big Bang” origin of the universe; they were closely correlated with those who did not believe in human evolution. Religious fun...

    Authors: Allan Mazur
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:239
  26. Biological evolution and abiogenesis are distinct branches of science, although they are closely related in the context of a holistic evolutionary conceptual framework. The relationship between evolution and a...

    Authors: Barend Vlaardingerbroek
    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:209

Annual Journal Metrics

  • 2022 Citation Impact
    1.588 - SNIP (Source Normalized Impact per Paper)
    1.070 - SJR (SCImago Journal Rank)

    2023 Speed 
    11 days submission to first editorial decision for all manuscripts (Median)
    201 days submission to accept (Median)

    2023 Usage
    1,029,742 downloads
    1,291 Altmetric mentions 

This journal is indexed by

    • SCOPUS
    • Google Scholar
    • DOAJ
    • EBSCO Science Reference Center
    • EBSCO Discovery Service
    • OCLC WorldCat Discovery Service
    • ProQuest Biological Science Database
    • ProQuest Natural Science Collection
    • ProQuest SciTech Premium Collection
    • Zoological Record
    • UGC-CARE List (India)
    • TD Net Discovery Service
    • SCImago
    • ProQuest-ExLibris Summon
    • ProQuest-ExLibris Primo
    • ProQuest Central
    • Naver
    • Meta
    • Dimensions
    • Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - GoOA
    • CNKI
    • BFI List
    • ANVUR

Need help with APC funding?

We offer a free open access support service to make it easier for you to discover and apply for article-processing charge (APC) funding. 

Waivers

Authors without funds to cover the Article Processing Charge (APC) are eligible for a discretionary waiver of the APC, and should request a waiver during submission. 

Evolution: Education & Outreach also has waivers available at the Editor's discretion. Authors can contact the Editor in Chief for more information. 

ISSN: 1936-6426 (print)