To access extended pro and con arguments, sources, and discussion questions about whether K-12 students should dissect animals, go to ProCon.org.
Dissecting a frog might be one of the most memorable school experiences for many students, whether they are enthusiastic participants, prefer lab time to lectures, or are conscientious objectors to dissection.
The use of animal dissection in education goes back as far as the 1500s when Belgian doctor Andreas Vesalius used the practice as an instructional method for his medical students.
Animal dissections became part of American K-12 school curricula in the 1920s. About 75-80% of North American students will dissect an animal by the time they graduate high school. An estimated six to 12 million animals are dissected in American schools each year. In at least 18 states and DC, K-12 students have the legal option to request an alternate assignment to animal dissection.
While frogs are the most common animal for K-12 students to dissect, students also encounter fetal pigs, cats, rabbits, guinea pigs, rats, minks, birds, turtles, snakes, crayfish, perch, starfish, and earthworms, as well as grasshoppers and other insects. Sometimes students dissect parts of animals such as sheep lungs, cows’ eyes, and bull testicles.
PRO
- Dissecting a real animal provides students with more learning opportunities.
- Dissection can encourage students to pursue careers in science.
- Animal dissection is a productive and worthwhile use for dead animals.
CON
- Methods used to supply animals for dissections are bad for the environment and inhumane.
- Medical studies do not require or benefit from animal dissection.
- Dissecting real animals is unnecessary since alternatives exist.
This article was published on April 9, 2020, at Britannica’s ProCon.org, a nonpartisan issue-information source.