Stories from Kuwait

Students from Al Bayan, American Bilingual, Fatima Alsarawi, Maria Alqobtia and Salah El-Deen schools in Kuwait are reporting stories for the MEPI (Middle East Partnership Initiative) High School Journalism project and World Youth News.
They have also been busy with many activities, including TV interviews, newspaper visits with their mentors, and meetings with U.S. Embassy and MEPI guests.
Take a look at their photos, school blogs and newspapers.
iEARN, PBS Newshour Extra and UNICEF supported students in Turkey, Pakistan, India and U.S. to report on the state of the MDGs in their communities. Here is the first report from our MDG Reporting Labs.
Students from Boston Latin, Quincy Upper, Snowden and O'Bryant schools in Boston are reporting stories for the U.S.-Mongolia Emerging Youth Leaders Program. The program is supported by the U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. Read their reports.
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.
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.
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.
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.
A troubled young boy from Tajikistan transforms his life through English classes and activities at the American Corner, surprising his family and changing his future
As Egypt goes through dramatic changes, here's a different glimpse into life there.
First part of a series with journalist Stacie Chan on hyperlocal news.

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