That question makes no sense - please rephrase it to make clear what you mean.
In an nunnery. Monks lived in Monerstrys.
The leader of a monastery in the Middle Ages was an Abbot.
Never. It was not the role of monks anywhere in Europe to educate communities; it was the role of monks to remain isolated from communities and the world outside the monastery. Monks certainly offered education, but only to boys or men entering the monastery and seeking to join the monastic community. The Church as an institution also offered education to men wishing to become priests or other clerics within the Church hierarchy - it was this that led to the establishment of the first universities, aimed at educating potential recruits into the Church. Ordinary folk had very little education, mainly from their parish priest and at a very rudimentary level.
robes
to educate physicians, astronomers and mathematicians.
An abbot is the leader of a Monastery. IF the leader was a woman, she was called the abbess.
In a monastery. They could not leave the monastery besides the exception of the fryer.
Monks
it actually helped the monks achieve zen
work
by monks in middle ages
There were lots and lots of monks in the Middle Ages. Nuns, too. Roger Bacon was a famous monk of the period, and Hildegard of Bingen was a famous nun.