Amanda L. (Glaze) Townley

Associate Professor Georgia Southern University

  • Statesboro GA

Dr. Amanda Townley's research centers on the intersections of science and society, specifically the acceptance and rejection of evolution.

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Biography

Dr. Townley specializes in evolution education research and development, alternating her time between the classroom and the field as an Associate Professor of Middle Grades & Secondary Science Education at Georgia Southern University. Her research centers on the intersections of science and society, specifically the acceptance and rejection of evolution in the Southeastern United States and the impact of the conflict between religion and evolution on science literacy. Her research and outreach have been featured on the NPR radio series Science Friday, the NPR video series The Macroscope, Vox.com, and the Bold Signals podcast. She has further contributed as an invited guest on the National Center for Science Education (NCSE) Science League of America Blog, ErrantScience.com, and WeTheHumanties.com and collaborator with the Human Origins Program at the Smithsonian Institution. Her outreach includes service as a curator for RealScientists.org and @RealScientists on Twitter, @IAmSciComm, @BioTweeps, and expert panelist for Science Friday's education focus #TeachTheE. She is a regular Science Education writer for the Times Education Supplement USA edition and Books Editor for The American Biology Teacher journal. She presently serves on the Curriculum Board for the National Geographic Umsuka project for the Cradle of Mankind Heritage site, South Africa. Her publications can be found in Science Education, The International Journal of Mathematics and Science Education, Education Sciences, The American Biology Teacher, Georgia Education Researcher, Revue Internationale d'Education de Sevres, and Nature Ecology & Evolution. Publications available without paywall via ResearchGate.

Areas of Expertise

Pre-Service Teacher Education
Intersections of Science and Society
Worldview Theory
Evolution Education
Conceptual Change
Ecologies of Learning
Science Literacy

Accomplishments

Emerging Scholar Award

2023
American Educational Research Association, Religion & Education Special Interest Group

Award for Excellence in Research

2021
Georgia Southern University

Jack Miller Scholarship Award

2020
Georgia Southern University College of Education

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Education

Ph.D.

University of Alabama

Curriculum & Instruction

2013

Specialization: Science Education
Major Professor: M. Jenice Goldston

Ed.S.

Jacksonville State University

Secondary Science Education

2009

M.S.Ed.

Jacksonville State University

Secondary Science Education

2008

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Affiliations

  • American Education Research Association
  • Association for Science Teacher Education
  • American Association for the Advancement of Science
  • American Association of Physical Anthropologists
  • Association of Middle Level Educators
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Media Appearances

Teachers Help One Another Bring Evolution Back to the Classroom

Scientific American  online

2018-08-01

Yet to those who grew up in devoutly religious communities and have gone through the process of learning evolution, it is obvious that ignoring religion won’t work. Amanda Glaze, who is a professor of middle grades and secondary education at Georgia Southern University, was inspired to study evolution education in part by her own experience. After growing up in a creationist family on an Alabama farm, she fell in love with science and eventually came to accept Darwin’s theory of evolution. But it was not an easy journey.

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Unspeakable, Forbidden, Taboo: Teaching Evolution in the South with Dr. Amanda Glaze

The Evolution Institute  online

2018-07-08

Evolution remains a taboo and often misunderstood subject for much of the American South. Dr. Amanda Glaze studies this deeply rooted cultural attitude and its religious and societal influences. Her research centers on the intersections of science and society, specifically the acceptance and rejection of evolution in the Southeastern United States and the impact of the conflict between religion and evolution on science literacy. Join Dr. Glaze as she discusses her research on teaching and learning evolution in the South and hear the insightful stories she has collected along the way ...

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Teaching evolution in the South: an educator on the “war for science literacy"

Vox  online

2016-10-25

Amanda Glaze is a professor of science education at Georgia Southern University. Before that she spent roughly a decade teaching K-12 in Georgia and Alabama. She has spent her entire teaching career in the South.

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Event Appearances

A house on solid ground: science and faith in the evangelical South

Invited Address  Samford University, Birmingham, AL

Mind and Soul: Intersections of Science and faith in the Push for Science Literacy

Invited Address  University of Tyler Texas Darwin Week, Tyler, TX

Reflections of an Evangelical Evolutionary Biologist: Walking in a World of Science and Faith

Invited Address  University of Tyler Texas Darwin Week, Tyler, TX

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Research Grants

Expanding the Teaching and Understanding of Diverse Evolutionary Studies (ETUDES)

A Level Three Late-Stage Design & Development Proposal to NSF DRPK12

2024 (in progress)

Supporting local teacher professional learning in authentic contexts in coastal Georgia

MyGeorgia COAST

2023

GS Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship Program

NSF Robert Noyce Scholarship Program Track 1

2021

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Articles

Leveraging Communities of Practice as Professional Learning Communities in Science, Technology, Engineering, Math (STEM) Education

Education Sciences

2020

In the modern educational era, there is an increasing focus on Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) education. Innovation and workforce preparation play a large role in the push to increase scientific literacy, thinking skills and high-skilled personnel. However, there are ongoing issues with reforming education to meet these goals as well as the recruitment and retention of students in these fields.

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The Generalized Acceptance of EvolutioN Evaluation (CAENE) 3.0: Enhancement and Validation of a New Measure of Acceptance

Journal of Higher Education Theory and Practice

2020

This study builds upon existing analysis of validity and reliability wherein the instrument performed at statistically strong levels in high school and post-secondary applications (Smith, Snyder & Devereaux, 2016). In response to concerns with prior validation, the researchers added items to address extremes in the Rasch person-item continuum, removed Rasch model mis fitting items, collapsed two correlated items, and conducted further analysis of construct (convergent) validity through comparison to two existing measures of acceptance.

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Evolution education is a complex landscape

Nature Ecology & Evolution

2019

Researchers in various contexts have long struggled with an apparent disconnect between an individual’s level of understanding of biological evolution and their acceptance of it as an explanation for the history and diversity of life. Here, we discuss the main factors associated with acceptance of evolution and chart a path forward for evolution education research.

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