Comparison

Philippines vs Kazakhstan

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

At a glance

Philippines

In the Philippines, the word for babysitter barely exists โ€” there's always a tita or lola nearby.

Filipino kinship networks are among the densest in the world โ€” a child may have dozens of functional aunts and uncles through both blood and the compadre system.

Kazakhstan

Kazakh children learn to ride horses before they learn to ride bicycles.

Nomadic equestrian heritage runs deep โ€” horseback games like kokpar are taught to children in rural areas alongside modern school subjects.

How they compare
Child independence expectations
Philippines
Kazakhstan
Low High
Structured enrichment emphasis
Philippines
Kazakhstan
Low High
Risk tolerance in play
Philippines
Kazakhstan
Low High
School systems
K-12 bilingual model (post-2013 reform)

Philippines

The K-12 system introduced in 2013 added two years of senior high school. Instruction uses mother-tongue based multilingual education in early grades, transitioning to Filipino and English. The school year runs June to March to accommodate typhoon season.

Trilingual reformed model

Kazakhstan

Kazakhstan follows an 11-year system transitioning to 12 years. Kazakh and Russian are both languages of instruction, with English being added as a third language for science subjects. The Nazarbayev Intellectual Schools serve as reform laboratories.

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โ† Philippines profile ยท Kazakhstan profile โ†’