Education
mid 16th century: from Latin educatio(n- ), from the verb educare (see educate).
wiktionary
Borrowed from Middle French éducation, from Latin ēducātiō(“a breeding, bringing up, rearing”), from ēdūcō(“I educate, train”), from ēdūcō(“I lead forth, I take out; I raise up, I erect”). See educate. Morphologically educate + -ion
etymonline
education (n.)
1530s, "child-rearing," also "the training of animals," from French education (14c.) and directly from Latin educationem (nominative educatio) "a rearing, training," noun of action from past-participle stem of educare (see educate). Originally of instruction in social codes and manners; meaning "systematic schooling and training for work" is from 1610s.
All education is despotism. [William Godwin, "Enquirer," 1797]