Kenya vs Bahamas
Side-by-side comparison of how these places approach childhood.
Kenya
In Kenya, rural children walk 6 km to school on average, and boarding schools start at age 7.
Education is seen as the single most important investment a family can make โ parents sacrifice enormously to keep children in school, and boarding is embraced as a way to maximize learning time.
Bahamas
Bahamian children celebrate Junkanoo with handmade costumes in street parades at dawn.
This Boxing Day and New Year festival is the cultural heart of Bahamian childhood, with months of preparation.
Kenya
Kenya transitioned from the colonial 8-4-4 system to a new Competency-Based Curriculum in 2017. The new 2-6-3-3-3 structure adds pre-primary years and introduces junior secondary school. English and Kiswahili are both languages of instruction. National schools are the prestige tier.
Bahamas
The Bahamas follows a British-derived 6-3-3 system with compulsory education from ages 5 to 16. Government and private schools coexist. The BJC and BGCSE national exams mirror British O-Levels and A-Levels in structure.
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