Brazil vs New Zealand
Side-by-side comparison of how these places approach childhood.
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.
New Zealand
In New Zealand, barefoot children are normal everywhere โ schools, shops, streets.
Going barefoot reflects a relaxed, outdoors-first culture where children are trusted to explore freely and physical toughness is quietly encouraged from a young age.
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.
New Zealand
School starts at age 5. The curriculum (Te Marautanga) integrates Maori language and values. Primary runs to year 8, secondary to year 13. Decile-based funding directs resources to lower-income schools.
Planning a move from Brazil to New Zealand?
Get a personalised Family Integration Playbook โ your parenting style mapped to your destination's culture.
Get your playbook โ $99