I rarely find myself in any significant disagreement with you Dr, and it's your money so spend it wherever and however you like.
However, even Sideshow Bob was a new instructor somewhere back in the long ago (I know we're talking about the mists of time, but it happened ...) And if the only thing he'd been allowed to do was EoC where would we be now ?
Pilots don't magically wake up one day as experienced instructors, so those of us who have been around a while have a very clear obligation to assist in the professional development of new instructors. That includes giving them the opportunity to broaden their teaching experience so that they can become the BHs of this world.
Straight into the deep end with a real NDB approach to minima, asymmetric missed approach, then down through a gap and circle to land ? Of course not. But somewhere between becoming a brand new junior Grade 3 and retirement, they have to learn to do it to a very high standard.
There are many accusations you could level at the Australian flight training community, but the most damning ones in my book are that we spend very little effort teaching people how to teach, and we pay almost no regard to recruiting the next generation of instructors and helping them to become better than we were.
It's been that way for years, and I don't see anyone anywhere in authority doing anything whatsoever to improve things.