True, but the current inhabitants haven't been. What they will be teaching is neo paganism - "new age" and "wicca" and that kind of stuff. It has to be that way because very little is definitively known about ancient british pagan beliefs. The druids didn't leave any written records of their belief systems, forms of worship and ceremonies. The only people who did were the Romans, who loathed them, and can therefore hardly be expected to be impartial observers. As long as children are taught about it objectively as the belief system that christianity replaced, then knowledge is a good thing.
And what would be the chances of that happening?
“And what would be the chances of that happening?”
Pretty good I’d say! :)
I live on the Isle of Wight, the last part of England to ‘convert’ to Christianity as recently as 686AD when King Caedwalla sent an army over to slaughter every last islander for the sin of paganism. When every last man, woman and child had been slain in the name of Christ, the conversion was complete. If they can teach that, they can teach anything.