This journal article within the Journal of Education & Social Development, forms part of a broader collection titled Strategy, Society, and Statecraft: Insight into Global and Social Dynamics. It challenges the dominance of results-oriented thinking in education and society by arguing for a renewed emphasis on process. Drawing on philosophical reasoning, psychological insight, and economic logic, it explores how both the education system and private sector have come to prioritise visible outcomes such as grades, KPIs, and deliverables, often at the expense of long-term growth, resilience, and meaning. The piece contends that true success is not simply measured by achievement, but by the integrity and depth of the journey taken to get there. Through examples of argument construction, workplace development, and human motivation, the article presents a compelling case for why valuing process is not only more human, but also more productive. It concludes with a reflection on what might be overlooked in the pursuit of measurable progress and invites a broader cultural shift in how success is defined.
Selman Omer (Sat,) studied this question.
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