I don't mind T&G when conditions warrant.
10,000' runway and a Skyhawk? Yes. Sheesh. Student can take a short nap, wake up, reconfigure, confirm, and still be fine.
Same runway, light twin, 9000' DA today? Nope. We're going to taxi back. The remaining runway is all we've got if we trash a mill during takeoff. The Skyhawk will land in the golf course, the twin, won't fare as well, and it's going to hurt.
Plus, if your CFI won't let you do T&G, just ask them to teach you "Circuits and Bumps". The British version is more fun anyway.
A botched T&G can also be a teachable moment for learning to determine when a takeoff hasn't happened by a point on the runway where it really should have by now, and aborting the takeoff. Highlighting to someone that takeoff aborts don't always happen slow and near the beginning of the takeoff roll, and letting them see it, isn't a bad thing.
Our pattern is sometimes so full, even attempting full-stops will make a mess of it. Tower won't ever say no to those, but with six in the pattern, expect to sit for a long time at the hold-short line for them to re-launch you if you ask for them constantly. And "unable stop-and-go, cleared touch and go..." is a regular thing on busy days.
If you really have a student who needs full stops, and yeah, some do.... you'll be working on those cross country skills right off the top of the bat, since you won't get anything done at my home 'drome on any nice weather day with low winds when the pattern is full of students.
Closest uncontrolled paved field is also going to be either a hike over terrain to the south, or you get to start teaching about Bravos and transitioning them or going under and around the shelf, to get to one.