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We are looking for secondary school students to join us as Youth World News Reporters. If you'd like to take our online training course to become a certified Youth World News Reporter or if you'd like more information, click here.

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News We Like

Students Recall Ordeal in Kyrgyzstan, Dawn, Pakistan

'Children's University' Opens Gates for First Time, Nine O'Clock, Romania

If you are a secondary school student and have found a news story that's particularly interesting for young people, please send us the link.

Special reports from Oman

Students in 10 schools across Oman are developing print and/or online newspapers as part of a High School Journalism Education Program. Read the first editions of two newspapers produced by Shinas and Afra Bint Obeid schools. The program is supported by the U.S. Department of State's Middle East Partnership Initiative.

To translate reports, you can use Babblefish or Google Translate.

  • College Campuses Turn Harry Potter Sport Into Reality

    When JK Rowling debuted her Harry Potter series, the sports world added a new game to their list: Quidditch. It officially became a real sport with the first match between between Middlebury and Vassar in 2005.

  • 'Why Not Start by Accepting Us as Koreans?'

    On a quiet Friday night, several North Korean defectors gathered near Seoul World Cup Stadium. Dressed in the latest fashions, they looked like typical young Koreans. But there was some hesitation in their eyes when they were asked about their lives in South Korea.

  • Israel's new heritage list brings Hebron youth out to the streets in protest

    Palestinians in the West Bank city of Hebron clashed with Israeli forces in February to protest the inclusion of the Cave of the Patriarchs in Israel's heritage list. World Youth News Reporter Mahmoud Jabari sent this report from Hebron.

  • Summer School: A Cultural Exchange in Thailand

    Lynda Lopez, a World Youth News reporter from Chicago, won a scholarship to spend the summer studying in Thailand. In her spare moments, she began chronicling the lives of young people there – having fun, studying, eating – through photographs, interviews, and shared experiences.

  • Laws Don't Do Much To Stop Child Labor

    Do you know where your shirt or your shoes came from? The most basic things in our lives are often made by a child laborer. In reports from Brazil, Philippines and Ghana, World Youth News reporters look at how child labor is continuing, despite laws to prohibit it.

     

     

  • Garbage Adds Ugly Colors to Karachi

    Karachi is widely known as a colorful city, from the clothes people wear to the food they eat to the highly decorated public buses they travel in. But some of the color in this Pakistani city comes from garbage strewn along roads, parks and other public places.

  • It's a Balance Between Fun and Caution on Social Networking Sites

    Teenagers are spending more time with new and old friends on social networking sites. But they are also becoming more careful. World Youth News reporters in Romania, India and Brazil look at social networking trends in their countries.

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  • It doesn't take a long walk in Angela Thompson's shoes to learn who she is; looking at them will do. "It shows the story about my life," she says.
  • SLIDESHOW: Electric bicycles, or e-bikes as they are commonly called, are more than just a way to avoid pedaling for teenagers across Vietnam.
  • Looking for a new vacation site? How about trying your nearest desert for some dune bashing over 30 to 80-feet-high sand dunes?
  • A humanitarian worker shares what a typical day looks like in his "office" and what qualifications one needs to do his job in conflict zones.

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