Does the scientific community consider evolution to be good science? Yes. Evolution is mainstream science.

Evolution is supported by all of the major disciplines of science (link), and by all fields of biology. Both the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) and the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) have come out in strong support of evolution. Election to the NAS is one of the highest honors a North American Scientist can receive; it's members come from all fields of science and include most, if not all, Nobel Laureates in the sciences from North America. The NAS maintains a website on Science and Creationism, which has links to a lot of useful information on the subject. The AAAS is also very prestigious, and the AAAS also maintain a website, AAAS Evolution Resources, which similar to the NAS resource page, also has links to a lot of useful information.

The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, which awards the Nobel Prizes in chemistry and physics, also awards the Crafoord Prize in fields of science not covered by the Nobel: mathematics, astronomy, the biosciences (particularly ecology), the geosciences and polyarthritis. Here is a link to the Crafoord Prize Laureates. The following subset of winners are all evolutionary biologists, and incidentally, most of them are also all members of the National Academy of Sciences in the sections, Population Biology and Evolution and Environmental Sciences and Ecology .

2003 Carl R. Woese, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois, USA “for his discovery of a third domain of life” (link)

1999 John Maynard Smith, England, Ernst Mayr, USA George C. Williams, USA these three researchers are being awarded the Crafoord Prize for their pioneering contributions to broadening, deepening and refining our understanding of biological evolution and related phenomena such as the formation of species and their adaptation to changes in their environment.

1996 Robert M. May, University of Oxford, U.K., for his pioneering ecological research concerning theoretical analysis of the dynamics of populations, communities and ecosystems.

1993 William D. Hamilton, University of Oxford, England, for his theories concerning kin selection and genetic relationship as a prerequisite for the evolution of altruistic behavior.

1990 Paul R. Ehrlich, Stanford University, USA, for his research on the dynamics and genetics of fragmented populations and the importance of the distribution pattern for their survival probabilities, and Edward O. Wilson, Harvard University, USA, for the theory of island biogeography and other research on species diversity and community dynamics on islands and in other habitats with differing degrees of isolation.

1987 Eugene P. Odum, University of Georgia, USA, and Howard T. Odum, University of Florida, USA, for their pioneering contributions within the field of ecosystem ecology.

1984 Daniel H. Janzen, University of Pennsylvania, USA, for his imaginative and stimulating studies on co-evolution which has inspired many researchers to further work in this field.