Comparison

Uruguay vs Estonia

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

At a glance

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.

Estonia

In Estonia, every child gets a digital identity at birth and learns to code in first grade.

Estonia built the world's most advanced digital society after regaining independence in 1991 โ€” and children are digital citizens from day one.

How they compare
Child independence expectations
Uruguay
Estonia
Low High
Structured enrichment emphasis
Uruguay
Estonia
Low High
Risk tolerance in play
Uruguay
Estonia
Low High
School systems
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.

Nordic-digital hybrid

Estonia

Formal schooling begins at age 7 โ€” one of the latest starts in Europe. The national curriculum emphasizes digital literacy, problem-solving, and self-directed learning. Estonian and Russian are both languages of instruction, though policy is shifting toward Estonian-only. No tracking or streaming until age 16.

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โ† Uruguay profile ยท Estonia profile โ†’