Comparison

Uruguay vs Germany

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.

Germany

In Germany, it's illegal to work on your child's homework โ€” it's considered the child's responsibility.

German schools assign homework as a tool for self-reliance. Parents who do it for their children undermine the educational principle โ€” and teachers notice.

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

Germanic tracking model

Germany

Children are separated into academic tracks (Gymnasium, Realschule, Hauptschule) at age 10โ€“11 based on performance. No school uniforms. Lessons typically end by 1 PM, though all-day schools are expanding.

Planning a move from Uruguay to Germany?

Get a personalised Family Integration Playbook โ€” your parenting style mapped to your destination's culture.

Get your playbook โ€” $99
or $149/year for unlimited playbooks
โ† Uruguay profile ยท Germany profile โ†’