Schooling
“You learn what you can, where you can, if you’re lucky.”
Education in Everwealth is a privilege, not a promise. With nearly half of all settlements lacking formal schools, learning is a fragmented, itinerant affair. While cities may boast modest academies, the rural majority must rely on wandering scholars, literate parents, or sheer luck. Survival often takes precedence over literacy, and in many corners of the kingdom, a painted sign is more common than a written word. Everwealth’s approach to education is shaped by poverty, infrastructure decay, and an old-world reverence for knowledge long lost in the fires of the Schism.
Schooling:
Formal schooling is rare across the kingdom. Where schools do exist, they are typically located in major cities or the wealthier quarters of fortified towns. These schoolhouses are modest, often operated by the Scholar’s Guild or by religious orders. Outside of such places, there is no structured curriculum, and lessons are as varied as the people giving them. In many villages, “school” might mean a once-a-month visit from a traveling educator who exchanges basic literacy lessons for meals and shelter. In others, it might be a parent who knows enough to teach arithmetic alongside farmwork. Wealthier families may pay scribes or clerics to tutor their children, but for most, education is functional and focused only on survival. Availability:
Education is considered "uncommonly available" in Everwealth. Nearly half of all known settlements lack any formal teaching institutions, and the infrastructure needed to support centralized learning is absent or deeply eroded. When distance to education means days of foot travel through dangerous lands, often without guaranteed food or safety, the very idea of school becomes a luxury most cannot afford. Even those who manage to reach a town with a schoolhouse face new challenges: paying for lodging, feeding themselves during their stay, and returning home safely without falling into destitution. Substitute Literacy:
Due to widespread illiteracy, visual communication dominates. Most businesses rely on painted signs rather than written names, symbols easily understood by any passerby:
- A flagon means a tavern.
- A bed means an inn.
- A boot for a cobbler.
- A hammer for a smithy.
- A book with a candle (if you're lucky) marks a place of learning or alchemy.
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