A friend's daughter, who is a freshman at DeKalb High School, said she was bothered when she found the remains of a dissected cat in a wastebasket in a biology lab. I had not previously known that dissecting cats was part of the DeKalb biology curriculum. I took high school biology in the 1960s and dissected frogs, fish and crawdads. I helped some pre-med friends dissect a small shark on the roof of Willkie South when I was an undergrad at IU. None of that bothered me. (In fact, I can still remember how fascinated I was in examining the air chamber that keeps a fish upright in the water.) But what justification is there for mammalian dissection in high school biology? And why pick an animal that's universally recognized as a family pet?
My main problem with cat dissection is where the feline cadavers might come from. Yeah, sure, the school buys them from some science supply company. But where does the company get the cat corpses? If asked, they'd probably say that they're homeless cats euthanized by big-city animal control departments. Maybe. But there's also a black market in kidnapped pets out there. Why create a demand for large numbers of dead cats?
I support teaching good hands-on science in the public schools, and that includes dissecting fish and amphibians, provided the students and their parents have no religious or ethical objections. But high school biology is not a college pre-med course. Unnecessary mammalian dissection seems to me more likely to teach callousness than biology. I've found a website on the subject:
Click Here.
There are also several online "virtual" cat dissection program sites. Here's one of them:
Click Here.
Your comments, please.
My main problem with cat dissection is where the feline cadavers might come from. Yeah, sure, the school buys them from some science supply company. But where does the company get the cat corpses? If asked, they'd probably say that they're homeless cats euthanized by big-city animal control departments. Maybe. But there's also a black market in kidnapped pets out there. Why create a demand for large numbers of dead cats?
I support teaching good hands-on science in the public schools, and that includes dissecting fish and amphibians, provided the students and their parents have no religious or ethical objections. But high school biology is not a college pre-med course. Unnecessary mammalian dissection seems to me more likely to teach callousness than biology. I've found a website on the subject:
Click Here.
There are also several online "virtual" cat dissection program sites. Here's one of them:
Click Here.
Your comments, please.
