If I had the power to improve just one thing in today's world, I would without hesitation choose the quality of global education. I don't just mean building more schools or increasing the budget, but completely redesigning what we teach and how we teach it: prioritizing critical thinking, emotional intelligence, cooperation, and peaceful conflict resolution over memorization and competition.
Why education? Because it is the root of almost all other problems. Inequality, political polarization, the climate crisis, misinformation, violence, and even corruption have a common denominator: people who have not learned to question sources, to manage their emotions, to see the world from other perspectives, or to collaborate beyond their tribe. A good education system not only transmits knowledge; it shapes the way in which new generations interpret reality and act on it.
Today, many education systems are still stuck in the 19th century: they reward obedience, repetition, and standardized testing, while the world needs creativity, adaptability, and ethics. Changing this would have knock-on effects. A person educated in critical thinking will not easily fall for fake news or hate speech. Someone who developed empathy from a young age will rather negotiate than fight. Citizens who understand complex systems will demand sustainable policies and reject authoritarian leaders.
Long-term benefits:
- Healthier democracies: With voters able to evaluate arguments, cheap populism and manipulation would lose power. Decisions would be based more on evidence and less on slogans.
- Fewer violent conflicts: Peaceful dispute resolution would become a cultural reflex. Wars, crime, and domestic violence would decrease dramatically.
- Accelerated innovation: People with divergent thinking and without fear of failure would solve problems such as climate change or diseases in a much more agile way.
- Collective psychological well-being: An education that includes emotional health would reduce the anxiety, depression and existential emptiness that affect millions today. More balanced people build more stable societies.
- Real equity: Quality education would be the great social elevator. Talent would appear wherever it is born, breaking cycles of inherited poverty.
A final comment
I know it sounds idealistic. But if we have the hypothetical power to improve one thing, let it be the one that multiplies all the others. There is no investment with a greater return than a mind trained to think well, feel with conscience and act with purpose. The rest of the changes would come in addition.
Note: I used the DeepL Translate translator.
The images are my property.