Feature Stories
Ghana: Educating Girls about HIV through Peer Leadership
Theresa Adjei is a peer educator and leader
in Girls 1st, World Education's community-based
initiative in Ghana that prevents the
spread of HIV by providing vulnerable
girls with knowledge about HIV and other
sexually transmitted infections.
Indonesia: Learning, Growing, and Learning to Grow
"I used to hang around on the streets, getting a little money by singing and performing for people. I was lazy. This place, the Learning Farm, has changed my life," says Dedi Sudhandi, a 22-year old resident at the Learning Farm...
Laos: Improving Health Care Management in Laos
I became head of the Medical Training team after learning to be a trainer with the War Victims Assistance Project," says Dr. Lounethong. "When the project
transferred responsibilities to the province in 2002, I was very pleased because improving medical skills depends on learning new skills..."
Laos: Trip to the Field with Grapes for Humanity U.S.
Under a hot November sun at the Saravane Provincial Hospital in southern Laos, not far from the Ho Chi Minh Trail, Arlene Willis tells the story of how her 19-year-old brother was killed in a landmine accident in Vietnam in 1968...
Mali: Girls' Secondary Scholarship Program
Sara Walet Mohamed has plans for her future, a future that would not be possible without the support of the Northern Mali Girls' Secondary Scholarship Program. Sara's illiterate parents never went to school and she is the fifth child in a family of eight children, only two of whom have attended school.
Mali: Helping Girls Stay in School
Before the Ambassadors' Girls' Scholarship Program (AGSP), 11-year-old Badji Traoré was following in the footsteps of her older sister...
Nepal: Laxmi—A Dream Fulfilled
Born in a family with four other siblings, Laxmi never had the opportunity to go to school. Her parents, who were poor, chose to send their only son to school in the Udayapur District in Eastern Terai of Nepal, and deprived the four daughters, including Laxmi, of even a basic education...
Nepal: A New Life for Street Children
Ram Adhikari was only eight years old when he was left to fend for himself. "Street
life was hard. We couldn't get food or sleep well, and lived in dirty clothes," he
says.
Nepal: From Servant to My Small Shop
"I never imagined I'd have a shop of my own,"confides Momina Khatun, elated. Until 2 years ago, Momina was a domestic child laborer, working long hours for nominal pay. "Now I'm confident I can stand on my own feet,"she adds.
Nepal: How Mina Escaped from Being Sold
Mina was only 14 years old when her aunt visited one day. The aunt spoke with Mina's mother and talked about opportunities for Mina to join the circus in
India. Both of Mina's parents were illiterate...
Thailand: Training Refugee Teachers on the Thai-Burma Border
Saw Po Ben left his wife and three sons behind when he came to Mae La camp in 2003, as a teacher. A retired schoolteacher from Burma, he is now the director of the Teacher Preparation Course (TPC) in the camp. His role is to train young refugees in the camp to be teachers...
Uganda: Opening Homes and Hearts
Euleria Kamya recalls the day she went to Mityana Kolping House to receive two young children, the five-year old boys who were to be new members of her family...
United States: Learning Lessons Later in Life
Edell Howard is not a typical college student. Aged 38 and a father of five, Edell has had a lifetime of experience that traditional college kids would hardly be able to fathom....
United States: Transition-to-College Program Transforms Lives
The Sumner Adult Education Transition-to-College program in University Center, a University of Maine satellite site, has evolved from a successful
collaboration between the university's experiment with distance education and an adult basic education program into an exemplary transition program model...
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