What skill should every young person learn?

Why limit? Good answer because it should be all of those skills. Maybe the question should have been what skills?
Skills it should have been. There's much a child needs to learn but that learning, although important, can be made enjoyable. Teaching children to manage frustration, wait for what they want, and identify emotions builds resilience and focus. Essential skills include active listening, expressing feelings clearly, taking turns, sharing, and understanding perspectives. (empathy).

Encouraging curiosity, asking why, playing, and solving puzzles helps children learn to think independently and make decisions. Early mastery of tasks like using utensils, potty training, dressing themselves, and helping with simple chores by tidying up their bedroom, fosters responsibility.
Understanding personal safety, respecting boundaries, and managing personal belongings. All of these skills make children realise that life is not a television advert.
 
If you could teach younger generations one life skill that truly matters, what would it be. Patience? Saving money? Fixing things? Listening?Let’s share some wisdom.
#1 would be learn to swim. #2 is learn to read.

The first is very necessary for survival in Australia and the second allows for self education, a necessary path to life long learning.
 
I agree with others that young people need to develop a bundle of life skills at an early age when the stakes are not too high and they are still in a relatively safe environment when they fail.


"just learn how to get stuff done …I’ve seen at every level people who are very good at describing problems, people who are very sophisticated in explaining why something went wrong or why something can’t get fixed... but what I’m always looking for is, no matter how small the problem or how big it is, somebody who says, 'Let me take care of that.'"
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Barach Obama
 
I agree with others that young people need to develop a bundle of life skills at an early age when the stakes are not too high and they are still in a relatively safe environment when they fail.


"just learn how to get stuff done …I’ve seen at every level people who are very good at describing problems, people who are very sophisticated in explaining why something went wrong or why something can’t get fixed... but what I’m always looking for is, no matter how small the problem or how big it is, somebody who says, 'Let me take care of that.'"
-
Barach Obama
We say: no blathering, but cleaning.
 
There’s an old line that says the first step toward wisdom is to question everything. I think that’s a skill worth passing on—learning not to accept every claim or opinion at face value, but to think it through and decide what’s true for yourself. When you learn to examine ideas for yourself, you stop being pulled along by whatever everyone else is doing. Standing on your own judgment—even when the crowd goes another way—is one of the most valuable skills a young person can develop IMO.
 
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