I'm mixed on the whole "creation science" thing. Fundamentally, science, the way real scientists do it, is all about falsifiable hypotheses, for which we design experiments or otherwise collect data. "Creation science" is no such thing since you can't falsify it.

I have no objection to teaching your kids any religion or belief system you want, but if you teach them "creation science", you're undercutting what science is all about, and you're creating a kid who's going to be at a serious disadvantage if and when they ever want to be a real scientist.

Of course, there's a fundamental problem when science has very particular things to say about the history of the world and of the universe, backed by solid evidence, and religious systems also have very particular things to say, based on... other things. If you teach your kid what it means to do science, then that's going to have some incompatibilities with certain religious beliefs.

Needless to say, plenty of religious scientists have no trouble threading that particular needle, but they're not "creation scientists," either.