There isn't a curriculum in my neck of the woods for CCW. There is a 4 hour gun class which covers some aspects of general handgun features and operation, safety rules for gun handling, off-color cracks about the administration, and issues of liability if you are ever involved in a defensive use (or ND) of your firearm. I think a little bit on holsters. And safe storage was thrown in there too, to get us to realize what could happen if your unsecured firearm is found by a child or a thief.
I vote no, because all preliminary instruction just scratches the surface anyway.
I've been lucky, because I immersed myself in friendships and talking and reading and training about firearms over the last 8 years. I made it a hobby. A serious, mid-life hobby.
Firearm ownership is a right and a responsibility. There are already incentives to becoming a knowledgeable and responsible gun owner. People who are adults, property owners, with family and/or career, social, religious, and business ties to the community are stake holders and have a lot to lose if they use their firearm in a negligent way. There are huge legal liabilities (disincentives) for not taking gun ownership seriously or doing it wrong.
The Bill of Rights was written to make, enshrine and guarantee that citizenship be an active, stakeholder responsibility of free men engaged in, and retaining the power to, govern themselves in a democracy. Rights and responsibilities. Two sides of the same coin.