China vs Lithuania
Side-by-side comparison of how these places approach childhood.
China
In China, grandparents raise an estimated 90 million 'left-behind children' while parents work in distant cities.
Mass internal migration has created a generation where rural grandparents are the primary caregivers โ reshaping family structure at an unprecedented scale.
Lithuania
Lithuanian children celebrate Uzgavenes by burning a giant effigy of winter called More.
The Shrovetide festival features children in masks battling winter through songs, dances, and pancake feasting before burning the winter witch.
China
A nationally unified curriculum with intense academic pressure. The gaokao university entrance exam defines life outcomes. Recent 'double reduction' policy (2021) banned most for-profit tutoring for school-age children, dramatically reshaping the education landscape.
Lithuania
Lithuania follows a 4-6-2 system with compulsory education from ages 6 to 16. Lithuanian is the language of instruction, with Polish and Russian minority schools. The system has been reformed since independence in 1990 to align with EU standards.
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