Italy vs Morocco
Side-by-side comparison of how these places approach childhood.
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.
Morocco
In Morocco, children learn Arabic, French, and often Amazigh โ navigating three languages and two scripts before age 10.
This trilingual reality reflects Morocco's layered identity, where classical Arabic, colloquial Darija, French, and Amazigh languages coexist in daily life and schooling.
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.
Morocco
School starts at age 6. Primary instruction is in Arabic, with French introduced in grade 3. A recent reform reintroduced French as a language of instruction for math and science in secondary school. Amazigh language instruction is expanding but unevenly implemented.
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