My own personal opinion is that we should not require any child to learn things their parents find objectionable.
IMO, unless the facts in dispute are vital to survival as an adult, it is sufficient reason not to teach their children those facts in opposition to their wishes.
I couldn't disagree more. In my opinion, and I'm fairly certain I'm not alone in this matter, the purpose of education is to help the child become an individual, capable of thinking for himself, as opposed to a carbon copy of his parents. And yes, this does (or, at least,
is likely to) involve exposing the child to foreign ideas and viewpoints which the parents may find objectionable. And, indeed, alerting the kid of the existence of
facts which the kid's parents may find objectionable. It's not just ID; I can imagine, for example, a committed pacifist objecting to material in the history curriculum from which one might draw the conclusion that the only way to stop Nazism in the 1940s was by massive application of armed force, or George Orwell's argument in 1942 that "pacifism [was] objectively pro-fascist" at that time.
When I watch
the Penn & Teller: B******t! episode on Creationism and see Russell Brock (a Cobb County parent who advocates teaching
Creationism ID) saying how (and I'm paraphrasing) "wouldn't it be great for the parents and the children to sit down together, weigh the opposing opinions and decide which they'll go with," I am under no illusion whatsoever that what he actually means in his household is that he expects his kids to believe what
he does, and that any input on their part will consist solely of acquiescence.
Personally, I'm inclined to say that if you're so certain of the correctness of your beliefs, even in the face of prevailing objective evidence, then it shouldn't be too much effort to sit down with your kid and discuss your beliefs and why you hold them, and let
the kid decide,
for himself, what he accepts. If your stuff is truly that compelling, what are you afraid of? Personally, I'm inclined to think that the parents in Kansas who fear that their kids' faith will be undermined, and that that will potentially result "a rift in family relationships that may last for decades or even lifetimes" are tacitly admitting the bankruptcy of their faith and their parenting skills. I mean, what else can you call it when someone evidently feels he needs to brainwash his kids to prevent them from hating him?