Comparison

Taiwan vs Uruguay

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

At a glance

Taiwan

In Taiwan, cram schools (buxiban) are so common that streets around them have rush hour at 9 PM.

Taiwan's educational intensity rivals South Korea and Japan โ€” children's evenings are structured around supplementary classes that extend the school day well into the night.

Uruguay

Every Uruguayan primary school child receives a free laptop through the Plan Ceibal program.

Uruguay was the first country to implement one-laptop-per-child nationally, giving every public school student a device and internet access since 2007.

How they compare
Child independence expectations
Taiwan
Uruguay
Low High
Structured enrichment emphasis
Taiwan
Uruguay
Low High
Risk tolerance in play
Taiwan
Uruguay
Low High
School systems
East Asian model with recent progressive reforms

Taiwan

Nine years of compulsory education plus a 12-year extension making senior high school nearly universal. The curriculum underwent major reform in 2019, adding elective courses and reducing mandatory content. Mandarin is the language of instruction, with Taiwanese Hokkien, Hakka, and indigenous languages offered.

Progressive South American model

Uruguay

Uruguay follows a 6-3-3 system. Spanish is the language of instruction. Education is free, secular, and compulsory from ages 4 to 14. Plan Ceibal provides every student with a laptop and internet connectivity.

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โ† Taiwan profile ยท Uruguay profile โ†’