Yeah, it makes me feel like a curmudgeon, or like a job-protectionist, but I think it's a shame that so much of the "learn to code" movement is focused on training for professional software jobs, rather than on learning how programming works so that it can be used as a base tool, more akin to writing or arithmetic. Teaching all these professional techniques up front seems to me like training people for statistics or accounting jobs before they've taken middle school math.
That focus comes largely from the students. They want/need a job asap. Unlike a college freshman who has 4+ years to learn, and has set aside that space in their lives, it isn't uncommon for a student leaving these programs to be down to their last 30-60 days of savings after this program and need a job immediately.
Anything you teach them that is simply theoretical, you have to fight them to get them interested in. This isn't to say I didn't do it. I taught students basic C, binary conversion, arduino, basic electronics, game programming, noSQL databases, computer science, etc... in various classes. But there was always a group of students who wanted nothing outside of what they would need on the job, immediately.