No. Where have you seen it taught sans puddle of goo turning into life . . . leading to mud skippers leading to man? Not that it couldn't be, just that it isn't.
Um... my own high school? We started by studying genetics, dominant and recessive genes, then about tracing common characteristics through the fossil record to shared ancestors. At no point did my biology teacher say a 'puddle of goo' had anything to do with it. Nor did my anthropology professors in college when we studied the lineage of man, starting with our very early lemur-like ancestor, through the different unsuccessful branches that went extinct and the few that survived, slowly whittling down the diversity until only Homo Erectus remained and the last of the Neanderthals had passed. No puddles of goo necessary. You don't have to know where a road begins to recognize that you're moving on it.
When were you last in school to see how they were teaching it? Who told you they were teaching it that way?
Well, no. What you are referring to is science. The directly provable stuff is indeed science and worthy of being taught. The stuff extrapolated from the directly provable and projected on a VAST timeline to prove an atheistic creation myth is. . . not suitable for being taught as science. It is okay to admit we don't know some things, wise even. We don't know how life began . . . teaching a theory and presenting it as science is just teaching atheistic religious doctrine under the guise of science all the while screaming "church and state, church and state" anytime anybody else wants their equally unprovable theory to get equal billing. The parts that are science . . . . go ahead and teach in science class. I don't really want "the world being held up by a dude" taught in science class either. Lets let atheists get equal billing when class studies mythologies of the world.
I don't believe one has to believe atheistic creation myths to do science.
Seeing as how there
aren't any atheistic creation myths, I'd have to agree with you. There are some scientific theories about what -could- have happened, based on the observable results of experiments that attempt to replicate the conditions found on pre-life earth, but if you ever listen to people talking about these theories, it will go something like this: the evidence SUGGESTS that this is what occurred, we don't know for sure but this looks like the MOST LIKELY answer right now, it may not have been exactly like this but this would have been PHYSICALLY POSSIBLE etc. etc. etc.
No one is claiming facts where they don't exist, but when speaking of abiogenesis (the sludge-to-life idea you seem to be referring to) we do at least understand some of the mechanisms that could have brought it about, and we are able to admit that while a solid answer is not yet available, the search for the answer is ongoing.
Acknowledging the limits of current knowledge, the questions that still need to be answered, and the progress that is being made towards attaining those answers, is just as much a part of scientific education as teaching 'facts'.
...teaching a theory and presenting it as science is just teaching atheistic religious doctrine...
Science is nothing BUT theories. Pretty much every scientific fact is just 'this is our best understanding right now'. They are all subject to change when new evidence arrives--Gad's Asimov quote about the shape of the earth is a fine illustration of that.
For example, it used to be thought that whatever happened to you in your life didn't have any effect on the genetics of your children. Cut off a mouse's tail, and its offspring will not go tail-less. This was a fine 'fact' and was taught and absorbed for years, until someone discovered that what you do in life
does affect the genes of your children, but just in very subtle ways that we had never had the ability to detect before. (Read up on epigenetics if you'd like to know more about that, it's pretty fascinating stuff.)
Clearly what we had learned before wasn't true, but it was true enough that the people who learned it were able to become geneticists who could build on the knowledge that came before them to discover something that was even more true. Does that mean they never should have been taught about genetics in the first place? Of course not.
And for cryin' out loud, there's no such thing as 'atheist religious doctrine'. Atheists don't have a unifying dogma, or mythology, or culture. Atheists exist all over the world--some are spiritual, others are not, some believe in stuff without evidence (alien visitors, Bigfoot), some don't, some have a good grasp of science, others are ignorant and fine with being that way. Atheism isn't a religion and there's no such thing as atheistic doctrine. Sheesh.