People hear/say "education" as though it were a magic wand. But it isn't.
I emigrated at 21, almost 2 decades ago. You cannot " educate" the values that became mine due to allmy formative years having been spent in the UK.
I got "educated". At length. (Especially in the country I first went to) About how the host culture basically thought I was a lot less equal to men than I believed myself to be. Not unnaturally I was one to keen to give up what I saw as my rightful power and resisted all attempts to re-educate me.
If you can't educate the feminist out somebody, then I don't understand how it will miraculously work on a mysogenist.
You can tell people the social norms that will give them the option to avoid actions that will have lots of angry people wanting to bop them one. And you can clarify culturally unanticipated laws, so they can choose to avoid ending up in jail going "wtf ! what did I do ?"
But the fundamental belief that your power/rights should be what you have grown up to believe them to rightfully be.... I am far from convinced there is anything a course, no matter how well meaning, can change.
Having cared for an elderly relative, in our home, until the end of their life, I tend to find the people most enthusiastic about that sort of hands on care tend to be people that haven't actually done it. I am going to Dignitas. Damned if DS is going through what we went through and I don't think there'll be much gov. supoort for old age care by the time we are in need of it.