Chicago Teens Film What Matters to Them
At the end of another fantastic, collaborative summer with Free Spirit Media, we take a look back at the learning process behind the student-produced documentaries.
The latest Pulitzer Center education news and classroom visits.
At the end of another fantastic, collaborative summer with Free Spirit Media, we take a look back at the learning process behind the student-produced documentaries.
Students in a summer class in Chicago talked via Skype with five Pulitzer Center journalists and experts and blogged about their experiences.
Pulitzer Center hosts event for DC interns on “Crafting and Communicating the Stories of Our Time." Meghan Dhaliwal and Steve Sapienza discuss how to develop a "journalistic mentality."
USD architecture student Paul Short travels to Turkey to examine the interplay between life and design.
On June 19, the Pulitzer Center's D.C. education program participates in the "Do More 24" online giving campaign. Please support our work!
The 21 Pulitzer Center student fellows from our Campus Consortium partners this year will report on a range of complex issues from around the world—from public health to the environment.
D.C. students talk environmental issues in China, India and Russia with Pulitzer Center grantees in town for the Environmental Film Festival.
Pulitzer Center grantee Mattathias Schwartz visits D.C. schools to discuss the effects of the U.S."war on drugs" in one country along the supply route and the dangers of vilifying people and places.
Last month D.C. students got a chance to talk with photojournalist Robin Hammond, who was just honored this week with two international photography awards.
This is what engaged global education looks like - students and faculty at a high school in Philadelphia organized a "Day of Social Justice" around a Pulitzer Center-supported documentary film.
How do you talk about the most violent cities in the world with a classroom of fourth-graders? Dominic Bracco and Jeremy Relph figured it out.
Join us for a Google Hangout with National Geographic Fellow Paul Salopek.