I don't recall this being a large problem, and as a reference I have about 4,500 hours of dual given. Most students respect authority, but I always encouraged them to speak up if I told them something different from what another instructor had told them, or what they had read, or that just didn't make sense. An instructor should always be ready and eager to learn from his or her students.
For example, if I were teaching this sideslip drill - I don't think I ever did, BTW - I might tell the student to use whatever rudder necessary to maintain the RWY heading and to stop any turn from developing. If he or she responded, "Well, aren't we sort of turning when we fly a curved ground path?", I'd say, "For now, let's just assume no heading change = no turn. We can discuss the details later if you want, but they're not important here."
Online, I can think of two students or new pilots that did seem to have a fundamental problem with this sort of thing. Before he got banned, CTLSi would state things that were clearly wrong, then argue and argue and argue. On another forum, another new pilot argued for using an iPad speed readout on landing. When told it was potentially dangerous he bragged he would never be named in an NTSB report. A bold prediction, and one that was falsified in very, very short order.