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How can education help set US-China relations on a healthier course?

How can education help set US-China relations on a healthier course?

US-China relations seem to be shifting and changing minute by minute, and usually for the worse. Strategists can debate differences in outlook between the two countries from a political view, including where they share interests and where their interests and values diverge.
However, there is a cost on both sides to the war of words taking place between the two countries today. With the rise of competitive nationalism on a global stage, ordinary people in both countries face harm from overzealous patriotism and xenophobia.
A Pew Research Centre survey from March found
77 per cent of US adults held unfavourable views of China, while a 2023 paper by Stanford researchers reported 75 per cent of respondents in China had negative views of the United States. Such negative attitudes can lead to discrimination, bias, harassment and bullying.
Prejudice leads to misunderstanding on both sides, creating interpersonal and social conflicts that then bolster broader xenophobic and nationalistic attitudes and policies. Can education help?
Both countries value what we might call global citizenship education. While many activities and lessons can fall under this umbrella, vital to any approach is developing an understanding of the world and other people and cultures, allowing us to work and live on a global stage. Global citizenship education can be further described in terms of developing global knowledge, competencies, consciousness and engagement.
Often this is not one subject in schools but spread out across social studies areas, also including international service learning trips, partnerships and exchanges. Global citizenship education aims to respond to the situation we find ourselves in today. Schools can correct misconceptions and stereotypes and prepare students to
go out into the world and learn and work with diverse others regardless of culture, language or nationality.
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