You keep avoiding engaging with the actual discussion. And you keep claiming that I and I think ebia hold positions we do not, which is pretty annoying. Who said anything about wanting to go back to the 1900s or any other time - yet you keep bringing it up. Please, stick to what is being said.
You dont have secular education, that is the point. What neutral worldview is this so called secular education based on. Answer that and maybe you will have a chance of convincing someone you have real secular education.
Education is based on a worldview, or no education at all. Humanism and materialism are as much a worldview as Christianity or Buddhism.
Your system does not produce educated adults, so why you think this has been successful I do not know. This is the reason private schools for those who are able to afford them, and homeschooling for others, have exploded in numbers in recent years (and contrary to popular belief, the homeschoolers are just as likely to be secular types as fundamentalists - the biggest increases are among more mainstream folks who simply cannot find good public options) And this is despite a lot of money being poured into these schools.
As for the success of your public education among Christians - do you really feel, over in OBOB, that people have had a public education that makes them better Catholics - many of those who think they are the most devout are really adherents of a sort of conservative Americanism before they are Catholics. Do you really think the plethora of non-denominational sects and break-away groups speaks to the health of evangelical Christianity there. Why is it that new heresies seem to spring up there so fruitfully - Mormonism, Pentecostalism, the JWs, dispensationalism, the prosperity gospel, Christian Zionism.... what kind of education have people had in the so-called secular system that they can fall prey to these things - a lot of them are historically completely untenable. If secular science education is so good, how do people fall prey to the largely intellectually bankrupt arguments for young earth creationism.
Christianity in Canada, and I think Australia, is more low-key in many ways. People in general are not threatened by religious expression though in Canada (excluding Quebec) - you can be a Sikh in the army, or practice Native American spirituality, and not have to worry that you will have to cut hair or beard short. In our law, religious diversity of individuals is seen as part of culture and valuable, and that includes its visible expression.
Europe is a slightly different kettle of fish, and not a block on this issue.
But I think it would be much more interested in the number of orthodox Christian followers in the US if we must resort to the bums in seat way of measuring. The fact that there are significant numbers of people who are dispensationalists counts against the health of American Christianity, not for it.
As far as i know. Bishop Wright has not commented on whether the American idea of neutral secular education is possible.
The argument which ebia and I are making is simple, and you keep running around it. It is that the approach the US has taken is not logically possible. In the name equality of religion they have tried to produce a really neutral school system. But because all education systems are rooted in a worldview, they have failed. They have either had to resort to a non-religious worldview (which is not neutral, it is just as much a philosophical position as any religion); or they have tried to create a system with no worldview, which is impossible.
Humanism, existentialism, whatever, are not neutral. From the perspective of how we think about reality, they are each a kind of religion, so if you want to treat all religion equally in the public sphere, you cannot do so by elevating one of these instead of a theistic religious position.