I know this is aseperate argument but I disagree that it would be necessarily wrong to close church schools, the problem with theistic education seems that an emphasis is placed on the existence of a deity (or whatever). This to me is deeply wrong as an atheist and sceptic, I would of course also feel uncomfortable with an anti-theistic education as this would be wrong for many of the same reasons.
Education should be without bias, it should simply deliver the facts and assist people in learning how to process the information they have learnt, decisions about which religion you should follow should be separated from schools unless they are some additional "lessons" taken outside of the normal education system. Religion is for church and the home, not for school unless you are deliberately intending to skew the thinking of the pupils.
Well, I am going to have to throw myself on the flames here, as I disagree with your disagreement. Personal anecdote time:
I was raised in a mixed household, with one parent an atheist and the other a theist, and I was never forced to choose a worldview. When I was a teenager, I attended a private boarding school (private in the US sense) for my high school education that was, and is, an Episcopalian venture. For those who aren't familiar with it, the US Episcopal church is very similar to the Church of England. As far as Christianity goes, it is extremely liberal.
The two main reasons I went to this particular school were due to a family legacy there, and the fact that it pretty much was one of the top schools in the region as far as education goes. A large percentage of the graduating class goes on to higher education, generally at what are considered some of the top schools in the world. Not just the country, the world.
To be fair, the emphasis on education has no relationship to the fact that it is, at least on the surface, a religious school. Believe me, they are far more concerned with keeping the scions of a powerful elite as a fund-raising base than with any evangelical agenda (alas, I am not one of those scions). Keeping in line with their educational mandate, we were taught biology as most scientists view it (reading Darwin's
Origin of Species and all), basic chemistry and physics, touch typing, as well anything else a young person needs to succeed in college and eventually the real world today.
In spite of that, in order to hold to their original charter, they do require that all of the students be exposed to at least one year of "religious studies". Back when I attended, this meant a class in the Bible, mostly as a literary exercise (reading it front to back, back to front, and sideways), a class on comparative religions (my first exposure to what Judaism and Islam
really entail), and a class on classical philosophy. No indoctrination required.
As a result, I can ramble on about the "J" author with the best of them, I have a better understanding of how to approach religious source texts (especially after further studies in comparative religion when I went to college), and I can clearly and easily state that I am an atheist.
Although I would agree in the sense that a religious education requiring indoctrination is a "bad thing", I would hesitate to throw a baby out with the baptismal water based on several examples, including my own, that I know of.