Darwin Now is the British Council’s contribution to the international celebration of the bicentenary of Charles Darwin’s birth and 150 years since the publication of his ground-breaking work ‘On the Origin of Species’.
From November 2009 – May 2010 the British Council in Malta, in collaboration with the Directorate, Quality and Standards in Education, Curriculum Management and eLearning Department at the Ministry for Education, Culture, Youth and Sport, is holding an exhibition of the life and work of Charles Darwin in ten schools in Malta and Gozo.
The participating schools are:
St Benedict College, Kirkop Gozo College, Rabat Maria Regina College, Mosta St Ignatius College, Handaq St Margaret College, Cospicua St Theresa College, Mriehel Convent of the Sacred Heart School, St Julian's Our Lady Immaculate School, Hamrun St Albert the Great College, Valletta St Edward's College, Cottonera
In celebration of Darwin’s remarkable legacy in the 21st century, our Darwin Now project brings together an exciting series of global events and initiatives. It provides an international element to Darwin200, a national celebration of Darwin’s 200th birthday led by the Natural History Museum, UK.
Darwin Now will look at the impact of Darwin’s ideas on contemporary biology and evolutionary theory. It will explore the fundamental, influential and sometimes controversial nature of Darwin’s legacy and its relevance in the world today.
The Darwin Now exhibition explores Darwin’s life, his ground-breaking theory, and how his ideas are still relevant today. The exhibition sheds light on contemporary reactions to Darwin’s theories of evolution and how advances in fields as diverse as geology and economics influenced his thinking.
It is designed to explore the importance of the theory of evolution to the contemporary world and modern science, and highlights the work of several UK-based researchers who are pushing back the boundaries of evolutionary science.
Associated educational resources, including instructions for hands-on experiments, arts-based activities and suggestions for role plays and philosophical debates are available for students to download.
The exhibition is being shown in over 25 countries worldwide throughout 2009, in celebration of the 200th anniversary of Darwin’s birth (on 12th February) and the 150th anniversary of the publication of ‘On the Origin of Species’ (on 24th November).
If you can’t manage to visit the exhibition in person, have a look at the online version or download the exhibition booklet.
Charles Darwin is one of the world’s greatest scientists ever; the father of evolutionary theory. His breakthrough ideas about evolution have changed our understanding of the natural world and our place within it.
2009 marks the bicentenary of Darwin’s birth and 150 years since the publication of his book On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, which first described biological evolution through natural selection.
Darwin’s insight was that species adapt to their environments over time and that humans are, therefore, descended from earlier species. Today, the teaching of modern biology and many aspects of contemporary medicine are founded upon his theory of evolution, but his ideas have also had a wide-reaching influence on a range of other academics, including historians, theologians, novelists, psychologists, philosophers and sociologists. Indeed, many of the questions he raised a century and a half ago are just as likely to be discussed and debated today as they were then.
Tuesday 24 November 2009 09:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. Faraday Lecture Theatre, Royal Institution, Albemarle Street, London Randal Keynes (Charles Darwin Trust), Dr Sandy Knapp (Natural History Museum), Professor Peter Bowler (Queen University Belfast), Ian McEwan (author) and others Professor E. O. Wilson
The debate will also be streamed “as live” (with one hour delay)on the web throughout 24 November 2009 so people across the world can share and contribute to the celebration of a truly global idea. The link www.open2.net/darwinlecture will be accessible from 23 November 2009. There will be some video material (10 minute interview with John Murray – ancestor of the original publisher of Origin of Species) held on this link before the event.
Working alongside the British Council’s Darwin Now programme and in collaboration with both the Charles Darwin Trust and John Murray family (ancestor of the original publishers) the Talking without Borders series continues with a debate celebrating the anniversary of the publication of one of the most groundbreaking works of all time: Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection’.
Hosted in the historic Faraday lecture theatre at the Royal Institution of Great Britain, the event brings together a panel of leading figures from the field of evolutionary science and beyond to look at “global Darwinism”, assessing the impact of Darwin’s big idea and exploring how his theory has embedded itself in public consciousness to form the basis for our modern understanding of life.
If you wish submit questions for the debate, please send email to origin150@britishcouncil.org
|