Zack-Bloom
Registered
Students don't know what they don't know and by definition a class can't have enough dives on a single wreck to have "progressive penetration". So not running a line is just being lazy. In my PADI wreck class way back in 2004(?) we ran a line on every dive including our "graduation" dives. We were students and learning. Progressive penetration was discussed as something you might do with dozens of dives in a particular area of a wreck but highly discouraged for a novice student.
Just to clarify, in the class we spent a good amount of time doing line work. We laid a line between points on the RSB-1, and followed an intentionally-clumsily laid line many times through a pretty complex passage on the Captain Dan, first normally, then with a blackout mask. That said, it's not a cave course and you can't expect quite so much line-work as you would get there.
We are students. We absolutely would not run that course on our own if the instructors were not there, and having done it we now know that for a fact. We would explore one area at a time and gradually develop the understanding necessary to move that far into the wreck over many dives, using more navigational aids, that's what we were taught. If your goal is to teach real wreck divers, I'm not sure it's realistic to teach wreck diving in a way which doesn't align with how it's actually done. That is the attitude which made all of the class material I've read so divorced from real diving.