This sound more like a personal burr where you would prefer people be indoctrinated to your personal faith.
I don't have a faith. I'm a humanist and a critical thinker. Humanists disesteem faith. They value justified belief, meaning justified by the formal rules of interpreting evidence. And we value education over indoctrination. Indoctrination is how we teach children what we want them to believe if they aren't up to reasoned argument yet, but as soon as kids are able to begin thinking critically, we switch to education.
So, when 4-year-old Johnny is in Sunday School, he will be told the Genesis creation story enough times until he can remember it. No evidence or argument is offered, and Johnny is quizzed on his belief. If he questions the dogma, he is corrected - basically told that that's just how it is and to put away any skepticism, that being rebelliousness or the devil trying to steal his soul with doubt.
Then he graduates high school and goes off to university, where he is taught evolutionary theory. Education is completely different. Unlike with Sunday school, he will be shown the evidence Darwin used to arrive at his conclusions, and though he'll be tested to see if he learned it, he'll never be asked if he believes it.
This is what his indoctrinators back home fear, and why so many don't want their children going off to university to be educated, or even public schools when they can afford schools that repeat the Sunday school lessons. Here, creationism can be reinforced with further indoctrination, because, lacking an evidenced argument for it, it can't be imparted any other way.
We don't indoctrinate into humanism because for starters, it isn't a club to join. It's a world view that appeals to critical thinkers. In my case, I was a humanist before I first heard the word. Once I gave up faith, I no longer suspended disbelief and returned to this tried and true method for deciding what is true, right, and good. My disposition is liberal, my currency of belief is empiric justification, my metaphysics is godless and naturalistic, and my ethics are borne of reason applied to moral intuitions (Golden rule for personal morality, utilitarianism for society building and lawmaking).
Then one day, I came across what were called the Affirmations of Humanism, and saw my world view in writing, which is pretty strong confirmation that this was a holistic, natural worldview. I didn't need to be indoctrinated into it, and wouldn't have been interested in any indoctrination anyway, having spent so much time learning to immunize myself from it with critical thinking.