Comparison

Kenya vs Jordan

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

At a glance

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.

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.

How they compare
Child independence expectations
Kenya
Jordan
Low High
Structured enrichment emphasis
Kenya
Jordan
Low High
Risk tolerance in play
Kenya
Jordan
Low High
School systems
Competency-Based Curriculum (CBC) โ€” 2-6-3-3-3 model

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.

Refugee-absorbing model

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.

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โ† Kenya profile ยท Jordan profile โ†’