maau kay ka pakahuy.kahuy moy...whahahaha....cge2x mo amot nlng ko dre...
Education in its broadest sense is any act or experience that has a formative effect on the 
mind, character, or physical ability of an individual (e.g., the consciousness of an infant is educated by its environment through its interaction with its environment); and in its technical sense 
education is the process by which society deliberately transmits its accumulated 
knowledge, 
values, and 
skills from one generation to another through institutions.
[1] Teachers in such institutions direct the education of 
students and might draw on many 
subjects, including 
reading, 
writing, 
mathematics, 
science and 
history. This technical process is sometimes called 
schooling when referring to the compulsory education of youth. For example, Samuel Bowles 
[2] and Herbert Gintis, 
[3] Teachers in specialized 
professions such as 
astrophysics, 
law, or 
zoology may teach only a certain subject, usually as professors at 
institutions of 
higher learning. There is also instruction in fields for those who want specific 
vocational skills, such as those required to be a pilot. In addition there is an array of education possible at the 
informal level, e.g., at museums and libraries, with the Internet, and in life experience.