Why Iran's Nomads Are Fading Away
As modern life lures a generation to cities, some left behind struggle with drought and dust storms and wonder: What kind of life is this?
Access to quality education has a tremendous impact on the lives of people around the world, leading to positive outcomes in economic success and health. Pulitzer Center stories tagged with “Education” feature reporting that covers how education is used to improve standards of living, increase economic opportunity, and build a global middle class. Use the Pulitzer Center Lesson Builder to find and create lesson plans on education.
As modern life lures a generation to cities, some left behind struggle with drought and dust storms and wonder: What kind of life is this?
Education provides a sense of hope to Rohingya refugee children.
Harnessing the power of art to help Rohingya refugees.
Amanda Michelle Gordon, a New Yorker with ASD (autism spectrum disorder), ponders both the level of understanding of autism and the culture of Brazil's economic hub.
Rocio Albino Garduño takes her work home with her. Garduño and her family use their own home as a classroom to educate their traditional farming community about more sustainable practices.
A rural school for girls in India demonstrates how adding women’s rights education to the academic curriculum can help bring about systemic gender equality in traditional, patriarchal communities.
In 2000, Pardada Pardadi opened a school for poor girls in rural Uttar Pradesh, India's largest state and one of the most patriarchal. Only 45 girls enrolled—but it was enough to start a revolution.
In the wake of the Parkland and Santa Fe shootings, the push to arm more teachers has gathered momentum. Here, Texan staff explain why.
This IJNet blog on covering Massingir land grabs includes lessons in using new media techniques in remote areas.
TIME for Kids travels to Kakuma refugee camp in Kenya to learn what life is like for children who live and go to school there.
As a sex-for-grades scandal blights schools in the Central African Republic, a young group of pupils fights this abuse and corruption to champion the rights of children on the margins
One teacher in D.C. is not letting a language barrier get in the way of any child's education.
After the Pulitzer Center journalists' visit to the Free Spirit Media Program in June, students show their documentaries on fortune tellers, masculinity, safe spaces, and the use of marijuana.
The Pulitzer Center partners with Skype in the Classroom to facilitate engaging virtual conversations with professional journalists in classrooms across the U.S. and beyond.
The Pulitzer Center introduced scouts to Paul Salopek's Out of Eden Walk at the 2017 National Jamboree.
This week: for-profit schools in the most impoverished places; identifying bodies from the U.S.-Mexico border; and age-based asylum in Sweden.
At Summit School's Summer's Pulitzer Center Journalism Camp, four students learned how to research and write compelling stories.
NYC Lab School's Out of Lab project encourages high school seniors to slow down and observe their surroundings.
Fifth graders from Stanton Elementary in Washington, DC learned observation, interview, photography and writing skills as part of the "Walk Like a Journalist" workshop.
The Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting and the Thomson Reuters Foundation announce a special opportunity for Brazilian journalists.
The Pulitzer Center, The New York Times Op-Docs and Tribeca Film Institute® (TFI), have announced the winners of the pitch competition.
Amy Toensing visited Guilford College to present her Pulitzer Center-supported project, "A World of Widows."
Marvin Kalb on President Trump: "He hates the press, and yet cannot live without it. It is his oxygen; it is what keeps him alive, emotionally and politically."
Students from Columbia Heights Educational Campus and The School Without Walls at Francis-Stevens visited the Everyday DC Photography Exhibition for a workshop with Allison Shelley.