Well you did better than me - I ditched my entire first post because it was based entirely on assumptions and written in haste and peppered with feelings from my own past. Hardly objective.

Thoughts:
When I first looked into it, quite a few teachers were saying that they don't actually quite know how to approach adult students because it's a new phenomenon and there is no template. That's a reality right off the bat. It gets more complicated if someone had lessons years before (with who knows what quality of teacher), or self-taught first, or even if they had lessons on another instrument before because then there are assumptions about what the student "already knows". (Will blowing notes on a tuba help you dance your fingers over a keyboard?) Just to say that a lot can go amiss.
If I were to start lessons tomorrow in one of those scenarios, I would want the teacher to go for skills. If I've played in the past / am self taught - what am I doing right, and wrong, what am I missing, what do I need to know / be able to do? And go on from there. Those would be my goals, and I'd need to share them, because a new teacher doesn't necessarily think that way. Or might not dare think that way in case the student just wants to go along some kind of fast track (which doesn't work imho).
There is another way that a teacher might go about it. That is: "What grade level did you last play at? Grade 6? Ok, let's go through grade 6 pieces and go on from there." Instead of checking what skills and knowledge are there or not there, where the weaknesses and strengths are, this kind of teacher goes through repertoire at a given level and pushes it through. This might explain the level of the pieces in a period of only 4 weeks, all those scales, and all those pieces. That is one way of teaching, apparently.
Long story short - I think that this long list of things to do represents what the teacher is assigning. Personally I would be uncomfortable about that. I'd want to discuss what the goals are.