Comparison

Italy vs Democratic Republic of the Congo

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

At a glance

Italy

In Italy, a child's first espresso at the family bar is a rite of passage โ€” usually around age 12.

Italian children are integrated into adult social spaces from birth โ€” the neighborhood bar, the piazza, the family table โ€” rather than confined to child-specific environments.

Democratic Republic of the Congo

Congolese children speak an average of three languages by the time they start school.

With over 200 ethnic languages plus French, Lingala, Swahili, and Tshiluba, multilingualism is survival.

How they compare
School systems
Southern European model

Italy

A public system with strong regional variation. School runs from approximately 8:30 AM to 1:30 PM in many areas, though some offer full-day schedules (tempo pieno). The curriculum is nationally standardized but implementation varies between the prosperous north and the struggling south.

Low-resource fragmented model

Democratic Republic of the Congo

The DRC's education system covers a 6-2-4 structure but reaches only about 77% of primary-age children. Many schools are run by churches and charge fees. Conflict in eastern provinces has destroyed thousands of schools.

Planning a move from Italy to Democratic Republic of the Congo?

Get a personalised Family Integration Playbook โ€” your parenting style mapped to your destination's culture.

Get your playbook โ€” $99
or $149/year for unlimited playbooks
โ† Italy profile ยท Democratic Republic of the Congo profile โ†’