Qatar vs Kenya
Side-by-side comparison of how these places approach childhood.
Qatar
In Qatar, 90% of children attend private international schools โ the public system serves mainly nationals.
With expatriates comprising over 85% of the population, a vast private school ecosystem has emerged offering British, American, Indian, and other curricula alongside the Arabic-language public system.
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.
Qatar
Compulsory education begins at age 6. Public schools teach in Arabic with gender segregation. Private international schools offer diverse curricula โ IB, British, American, Indian, and Filipino systems. Education City in Doha hosts branch campuses of major Western universities.
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.
Planning a move from Qatar to Kenya?
Get a personalised Family Integration Playbook โ your parenting style mapped to your destination's culture.
Get your playbook โ $99