Comparison

Brazil vs Iraq

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.

Iraq

Iraqi children in the Kurdistan region learn in three languages simultaneously.

Kurdish, Arabic, and English instruction creates trilingual children navigating multiple cultural identities.

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.

Post-conflict reconstruction model

Iraq

Iraq's 6-3-3 system is recovering from decades of conflict. The Kurdistan Region operates a semi-autonomous system. Many schools run double or triple shifts to accommodate students. Over 8,000 schools need rehabilitation.

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โ† Brazil profile ยท Iraq profile โ†’