Foster greater self-management skills to help students navigate uncertainty
Reframe subject knowledge to increase its value in age of AI
Signpost skills more clearly so students recognise they're prepared for the future
Strengthen oracy to help students build meaningful relationships
Strengthen the role of school as the place to build purposeful connections
CAMBRIDGE, England,Sept. 16, 2025/PRNewswire/ -- A major new report from the International Education group atCambridge UniversityPress& Assessment (Cambridge) captures the voices of nearly 7,000 teachers and students across 150 countries. It offers a unique view of how students experience education today and the skills and attributes they think are important for a future being shaped rapidly by technological advance, climate pressures, and shifting global dynamics.
The report,Navigating the future: Preparing learners to thrive in a changing world, draws on responses from 3,021 teachers and 3,840 students worldwide, alongside insights from experts in education, social science, psychology, technology, government, and policy. It explores how students and their teachers feel about students'readiness for the future, the skills they value, and the challenges they perceive in developing them. Both groups see opportunities in digital technologies to enhance learning, but voice concerns about distraction and risks to critical thinking and communication skills.
Findings from the research include:
Michael Stevenson, Senior Consultant OECD High Performing Systems for Tomorrow,said: "What inspires me about this work is thatCambridgehave put students at the heart of it. The message is clear. If young people are to flourish, they need a way to develop purpose, intent and agency. That's the role of education – and that's why education needs to change."
International education ideally placed
With its diverse contexts and communities, international education provides fertile ground for innovation – whether in signposting skills, strengthening oracy, supporting wellbeing, or helping students navigate uncertainty. As the world's largest provider of international education for 3-to 19-year-olds,Cambridgeworks with over 10,000 schools in 160 countries and partners with more than 50 governments worldwide.
Rod Smith, Group Managing Director for International Education atCambridge,said:"This research gives us a deeper understanding of how students and teachers are experiencing change. What strikes me most is the clarity with which it highlights a simple truth: never has the role of schools and teachers been more important. At a time of profound global change, great schools, great teachers and a clear, purposeful curriculum remain the foundations of great education."
Next steps
Cambridgehas begun turning the insights from this report into action, with initiatives underway including:
DrIwan Syahril, Global Education Advisor and former Director General at Ministry of Education,Indonesia, said:"The findings already offer powerful signals for what education must confront and design for. With deeper multi-stakeholder integration and a bold, future-oriented lens, this work has the potential to influence global practice at scale."
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SOURCECambridge UniversityPress& Assessment