I would like to think at 50 years old, a teacher (okay not a science teacher!) and resonably intelligent I have a basic grasp of what both CREATION and EVOLUTION imply.
I don't mean to disparage your intellect, and I'm sure that you're plenty bright and perceptive.
Biology is a technical field. A lot of really groundbreaking developments have happened in the past decade, mostly thanks to a proliferation of cheap genetic analysis tools, and keeping up with that stuff takes more than a bright mind and an AARP card.
That's all I wanted to get across. Lest you get the wrong idea, I'm not a biologist myself (yet), just a dilettante, and I'm interested in whatever questions you might have. To help you, most people want to know things like:
1) Where do new species come from? What do we mean when we
say "new species"?
2) How does the process of evolution cause organisms to evolve things like eyes or wings?
3) Is evolution something that proceeds towards a goal?
4) What does "survival of the fittest" mean? Does that mean I should shoot my fat neighbor?
and so on. If you want to know what you're supposed to do with your life, or something, that's not a question science is equipped to answer. If you want to know about the world of living things, that's what biological evolution was developed to explain.