Comparison

Mongolia vs Ivory Coast

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

At a glance

Mongolia

Mongolian children as young as five race horses across the open steppe in national festivals.

During Naadam festival, children jockeys ride bareback for 15-30 km across open grassland in a tradition dating back centuries.

Ivory Coast

Ivory Coast produces 40% of the world's cocoa, much of it harvested by children.

The chocolate in your kitchen likely came from Ivory Coast, where child labor in cocoa farming remains one of the country's most complex challenges.

How they compare
Child independence expectations
Mongolia
Ivory Coast
Low High
Structured enrichment emphasis
Mongolia
Ivory Coast
Low High
Risk tolerance in play
Mongolia
Ivory Coast
Low High
School systems
Post-Soviet reformed model with nomadic adaptations

Mongolia

Mongolia follows a 5-4-3 structure with 12 years of compulsory education. Mongolian is the language of instruction in Cyrillic script. Boarding schools serve nomadic herder families. English is taught from grade 5.

Francophone West African model

Ivory Coast

Ivory Coast follows the French 6-4-3 structure. French is the language of instruction. Primary education became compulsory for ages 6 to 16 in 2015. The system uses centralized national curricula and French-style grading.

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