Good News Today — Kenya's Eco-Journalism Fellowships & A Filipino School's 25-Year Story
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Nature Kenya is launching its Environmental Media Champions program — an embedded journalism initiative placing twenty experienced reporters directly inside active conservation efforts across Kenya's Key Biodiversity Areas. This isn't a seminar or a certification course. It's a working placement, pairing seasoned journalists with conservationists in the field to surface the biodiversity stories that rarely make headlines. Candidates need at least five years of environmental journalism experience and accreditation from Kenya's Media Council. The program also makes a deliberate effort to recruit journalists from outside Nairobi and to bring more female voices into conservation reporting. Applications close May 30th. Twenty spots. One of the more thoughtfully designed initiatives in environmental media in recent memory.
The second story comes from the UAE, where Far Eastern Private School Al Shahba — a Filipino institution based in the Gulf — just celebrated its twenty-fifth anniversary. Students performed for families and community members in a celebration featuring drum corps and street dance presentations. Twenty-five years of building a school community far from home is no small thing. It takes consistency, dedication, and generations of people choosing to show up.
Both stories are about the long game: investing in storytellers who carry a mission forward, and building spaces where people genuinely belong. No bad news. No doom. Just what's going right today.
This episode includes AI-generated content.
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