Comparison

Cameroon vs Mozambique

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

At a glance

Cameroon

Cameroon runs two parallel school systems: one in French and one in English.

As one of the few bilingual countries in Africa, Cameroon operates separate Francophone and Anglophone education systems that rarely overlap.

Mozambique

Mozambican children speak Portuguese at school but one of 40 local languages at home.

As the only Portuguese-speaking country in East Africa, Mozambique's children navigate between colonial-era school language and indigenous mother tongues daily.

How they compare
Child independence expectations
Cameroon
Mozambique
Low High
Structured enrichment emphasis
Cameroon
Mozambique
Low High
Risk tolerance in play
Cameroon
Mozambique
Low High
School systems
Dual Francophone-Anglophone system

Cameroon

Cameroon operates two parallel systems: a Francophone system (6-4-3) and an Anglophone system (6-5-2). Each has its own curriculum, exams, and teacher training. Primary education is officially free and compulsory.

Portuguese-influenced centralized model

Mozambique

Mozambique uses a 7-3-2 system with Portuguese as the language of instruction. Primary education is free but not yet universally accessible. Bilingual education programs using local languages have been piloted in rural areas.

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โ† Cameroon profile ยท Mozambique profile โ†’