Under pressure from animal welfare groups, two national science teachers associations have adopted guidelines that ban classroom experiments harming animals. The National Association of Biology Teachers and the National Science Teachers’’ Association hope to end animal abuse in elementary and secondary schools and, in turn, discourage students from mishandling animals in home experiments and science fair projects. Animal welfare groups are apparently most concerned with high school students experimenting with animals in extracurricular projects. Barbara Orlans, President of the Scientists Center for Animal Welfare, said that students have been performing surgery at random, testing known poisonous substances, and running other’’ pathology (病理学) experiments on animals without even knowing normal physiology (生理学). At one science fair, a student cut off the leg and tail of a lizard (晰蜴) to demonstrate that only the tail can regenerate, she said. In another case, a student bound sparrows (麻雀), starved them and observed their behavior. "The amount of abuse had been quite horrifying," Orlans said. Administrators of major science fairs are short-tempered over the teachers’’ policy change and the impression it has created. "The teachers were sold a bill of goods by Barbara Orlans," said Thurman Grafton, who heads the rules committee for the International Science and Engineering Fair. "Backyard tabletop surgery is just nonsense. The new policies throw cold water on students’’ inquisitiveness," he said. Grafton said he wouldn’’t deny that there hasn’’t been animal abuse among projects at the international, fair, but he added that judges reject contestants who have unnecessarily injured animals. The judges have a hard time monitoring local and regional fairs that may or may not choose to comply with the international fair’’s rules that stress proper care of animals, Grafton said. He said that several years ago, the Westinghouse Science Talent Search banned harmful experiments to animals when sponsors threatened to cancel their support after animal welfare groups lobbied for change. The teachers adopted the new policies also to fend off proposed legislation in states including Missouri and New York that would restrict or prohibit experiments on animals. Officials of the two teachers organizations say that they don’’t know how many animals have been abused in the classroom. On the one hand, many biology teachers are not trained in the proper care of animals, said Wayne Moyer, executive director of the biology teachers’’ association. On the other, the use of animals in experiments has dropped in recent years because of school budget cuts. The association may set up seminars to teach better animal care to its members. It can be learned from the text that the teachers ban harmful experiments to animals in order to______.