Let me stop you right there.
The best possible education costs $1trillion per child. The best possible education also involves teaching christian values, if you're a christian, and muslim values, if you're a muslim, and buddhist values if you're a buddhist. It involves teaching evolution, if you think evolution is something your kids should learn. It involves teaching young earth creationism, if that's what you believe in. It involves teaching your child how to play the violin if you want your child to learn how to play the violin.
You're starting to see the problem with the situation as you've described it. There is no best possible education for everyone, and if there were, it would be impossible to provide because it would cost too much. Someone has to decide what education their child is going to get, and that someone has to decide what is cost effective. That someone should know the child well, preferably live with them, understand their development and interests. That someone is the child's guardian. Not you, not the public, the guardian.
We use "best possible" because there are many who have a vocation to literally give the
best care/education/support that is
possible given the situation. This can be a person's mission in life, and is a very big motivational factor. We don't say we know best in anything but the most exceptional circumstances (treating a student worse in their class purely because of their sex is something our society should say
we know best in), and it's generally agreed "best possible" is aimed at a set of outcomes (e.g. the best amount of compassionate care per time per patient) and it's this context which doesn't include subjective beliefs (e.g. religion).
This is why I love gtplanet. "Best possible" is a by-product of political correctness so allow me to rephrase if you will. We set standards to ensure that the worst allowed is acceptable to society. You yourself admitted a child's education would be contaminated if it did not teach basic communication and math skills. Who decides what these are? Why do they have to meet this minimum?
All we disagree on is where we set the minimum, or rather what is involved.
What if they're being taught in the home?
Private tutors don't have to be teachers, so they wouldn't be under the same professional obligations.
Famine
No.
Citing the law as a reason why something should not be done is not helpful - immoral laws have always existed and, with the help of folk who treat their beliefs as sacrosanct, always will. In fact citing the law as a reason why children should not be taught certain things is a fabulous path to fascism - this is the law, kids, and the law cannot be wrong.
I can argue against the Equality Act if you wish - this is after all the Libertarian Party thread and the existence of a law restricting behaviour and criminalising thought is a great place to do it - but I don't really care about it in this context.
The question is why parents should be allowed to teach their children unspeakably bad things (whether they are objectively bad or whether you believe they are) but not allowed to employ other people to do it for them.
The profession's ethics should preclude that leading to....
Famine
So is refuse collection. It's not relevant - the question is about teaching.
No. A
profession, in the traditional sense.
Famine
What are they then? Only you're assuming an ethical position on their behalf.
This is a list of the National Union of Teacher's ethical guidelines.
http://www.teachers.org.uk/files/active/0/NUT-Code-of-Professional-Ethics.pdf
As far as I'm aware teachers aren't bound to these as stringently as the professions I'm familiar with, nursing and medicine as there is no regulatory body equivalent to the NMC (Nursing and Midwifery Council) or GMC (General Medical Council).
Famine
It doesn't advance your argument about what should and shouldn't be taught any though - the fact that parents can take over the role of teacher and you're happy for them to teach hatred undermines you.Why not?
Because it would infringe on the rights of the parents. Look back at all my posts and each is saying
teachers as a profession. This would exclude private tutors.
Famine
It's also not the point. Why should parents be allowed to teach it if you say it shouldn't be taught, but not allowed to employ people to teach it? Why do parents acting as teachers have fewer restrictions on what they teach than actual teachers do?
Again this is coming back to professional conduct, which is hopefully finally answered.
Famine
Not really. My nation once upon a time considered that it was in their interests to kidnap people from West Africa and sell them to North America. They're currently signatory to the Human Rights Act and the UN Declaration on Human Rights, both of which also guarantee slavery in much the same manner.
Progressive is different from regressive. Not sure what you mean about "guaranteeing slavery"
Famine
I'm not interested in what my nation thinks - it's not even slightly relevant to what is morally correct. Whatever restrictions the Equality Act places on what teachers can and can't teach is not relevant to what they should and should not teach.
Where did those morals come from? Are you saying they exist in a vacuum away from national consciousness?
This is the question you've not yet answered.
Professional ethics are the bedrock of their respective professions. Remove them and we would have doctors refusing to treat patients on the basis of race; nurses only spending time with males. Actually, we already have a small minority who do that, the difference being that in this country it is grounds for your licence being revoked if you're caught. What would we have in a libertarian society?