Jordan vs Israel
Side-by-side comparison of how these places approach childhood.
Jordan
One in five students in Jordanian public schools is a Syrian refugee child.
Jordan hosts 660,000 Syrian refugees, and its schools have absorbed their children through a double-shift system.
Israel
In Israel, children navigate buses alone by age 10 โ in a country smaller than New Jersey.
A compact geography combined with a culture shaped by mandatory military service fosters early self-reliance and communal trust.
Jordan
Jordan's 10-2 compulsory system has expanded dramatically to absorb Syrian refugee children. Many schools operate double shifts โ Jordanian children in the morning, Syrian children in the afternoon. Education is free through secondary school.
Israel
Israel operates four parallel school tracks: state secular, state religious, Arab, and ultra-Orthodox (Haredi). Each follows a different curriculum balance of secular and religious studies. Compulsory education runs from age 3 to 18. The system produces world-leading outcomes in technology alongside deep internal disparities.
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