Comparison

Brazil vs Egypt

Side-by-side comparison of how these places approach childhood.

At a glance

Brazil

In Brazil, children play barefoot in the street until dark โ€” and the entire neighborhood watches out for them.

Community-based child-rearing is embedded in Brazilian culture โ€” neighbors, shopkeepers, and extended family form an informal safety net.

Egypt

In Egypt, families spend more on private tutors than school fees, creating a parallel education system.

This shadow education system shapes daily schedules, family budgets, and children's stress levels โ€” turning after-school hours into a second school day.

How they compare
School systems
Public-private split model

Brazil

Brazil's education system is sharply divided between public and private schools. Public schools serve 80% of students and operate in shifts โ€” morning or afternoon, rarely full day. Private schools, serving the middle and upper classes, run full-day schedules with far greater resources.

Exam-driven Arabic model

Egypt

School starts at age 6. Public education is free and compulsory through grade 9. Schools are severely overcrowded โ€” class sizes of 50-70 students are common in public schools. The system is divided into Arabic-medium public schools, experimental language schools, and private international schools.

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โ† Brazil profile ยท Egypt profile โ†’