I don't know if you can control how someone feels. No matter what you choose, somebody will feel discriminated against.
I am quite confident that if I looked at your reading list, I would find things objectionable to some religions, and I don't just mean that some weirdo wacko group might object. I mean that it is genuinely objectionable, contrary to the religious teachings of at least 5% of the population. Religious references are all around us and they pervade our culture. You can't get completely away. If you try, you'll be left with something so bland that it won't be worth learning.
The liberal approach would be to not banish anything from the classroom based on its religious content, but rather accept everything, and let the kids think for themselves.
And, whether or not you understood what she said, morrigan had a point.
Last point first, I understood exactly what she said. I was laughing because the statement is too broad to make her point, especially to many christians.
Now, to address other points..."I" do not have a reading list. I am given a reading list, from which I may choose which books to teach. Sometimes I am required to teach certain books, like "To Kill a Mockingbird" and "The Diary of Anne Frank." This probably varies in the U.S. from state to state, and even from district to district. But in my district, someone else makes up the reading list. There are many books I'd include and some I'd exclude, if asked, but I will not be asked.
Many kids are not taught to think. I wanted to have a short discussion about a couple of logical fallacies, and was informed it would be over their heads and I shouldn't even try. (I did it anyway, and they loved it.) I'm talking 17 and 18 year-olds here. Last chance for critical thinking before they enter the big, wide, fallacious world.....
Of course many texts (inclusive to mean anything one can read, including faces, advertisements, and cereal boxes) have some relationship to some kind of religion. The point is not to sanitize the classroom from all mention of any religion: the point is to make sure educators aren't promoting one religion (or for atheists, any religion) above others in such a way that students feel intimidated or discriminated against for having differing beliefs.
By "promoting," I mean conveying to students there is a "correct" way to believe, and saying or insinuating there is something "wrong" with a student who doesn't believe your way, or even at all.
I saw something very interesting during my student teaching fiasco last spring. In the classroom, my mentor was usually very careful to conceal her Christian beliefs, or to only discuss them when such discussion was truly relevant, which sometimes did happen with the various readings.
It was the "behind the scenes" action that surprised me. She was very judgmental about certain students she suspected weren't Christian, or weren't religious. She expressed pleasure to me that she had no "Muslins" [sic] in her classes, because she just didn't know how to act around "them." Certain other students simply didn't stand a chance with her, because she was sure they were not Christians by their behavior and dress. As far as she was concerned, these kids were just seat-warmers and would amount to nothing. I'm sure her attitude carried over into the classroom, as she virtually ignored these students. She just wasn't interested in teaching them.
She got on my case about my program director, who is lesbian. She actually got angry with me because I wouldn't denounce the woman and her "absence of morality."
What really blew her cork was finding out I'm atheist. Just a short time later, I was dismissed.
Then there was the middle-school teacher with whom I observed while she was teaching "Anne Frank." This lady had a Daily Prayer calendar displayed on her desk and turned towards the classroom. She had one of those clever carvings that reads "Jesus," but only when you look at it in just the right way. This was also on her desk.
During the study of Anne Frank, this teacher informed her class (long story, short) that Hanukkah is the day Jewish people celebrate the birth of Jesus. Not that it was a "Jewish kind of Christmas," or anything like that. It was the day the Jews celebrated Jesus being born. None of the students said a word, probably because they weren't Jewish and had not one clue. They just ate it up like....well, like gospel.
Yeah. Keep religion out of school.