One World Student Ambassador Laila Kunaish
This is the VOA Special English Education Report. 
 
One World Education is a nonprofit group based in Washington. The group  has a program in which teachers develop curriculum based on student  writing. The students are in middle and high school and write essays  about culture and global issues.
 
Students are invited to write about an issue they find important. Then  professionally developed learning materials based on chosen essays are  used in schools to teach other students.
 
Eric Goldstein is the executive director of One World Education.
 
ERIC GOLDSTEIN:  "Over the last four years, we have worked with over  fifteen hundred student writers and we have worked with  almost three  hundred twenty-five teachers accessing the One World curriculum."
 
He says the essays can serve as a writing and learning guide for thousands of students.
 
ERIC GOLDSTEIN: "It is truly the only online academic arena for young  people to share and publish their writings in a way [that] it serves as a  teaching tool for other students."
 
Mr. Goldstein is himself a former classroom teacher. He and another  teacher, Emily Chiariello, began forming plans for One World Education  in two thousand six.
 
The group publishes a study unit each month from August through May.  Each unit of curriculum starts with a chosen essay, called a "One World  Reflection." The subjects have ranged from single parenthood to  protecting rainforests to exploring Arab cultures, says Mr. Goldstein.
 
ERIC GOLDSTEIN: "We have had students writing One World Reflections on  women in the Muslim world, on Islamic media, on Arab media, on Arab  identity. One student [wrote] about being Muslim and how she is  perceived in her neighborhood."
 
Laila Kunaish of Washington wrote about her feeling that the media in  the United States are often unfair to Muslims. A learning activity based  on her reflection called for students to collect examples of media  stories and discuss whether or not that was true.
 
Laila was chosen as a One World Student Ambassador last year. Twelve  are chosen each year. Their reflections are published on the group's  website, along with learning activities linked to common reading and  writing standards used for testing. 
 
Isabel Nampakwa Kapotwe of Lusaka, Zambia, was also chosen as a student  ambassador. She wrote about Zambia's cultural traditions, its  languages, religions and tourist attractions. But she also wrote about  poverty and disease, and how, after her parents died, her grandmother  made a home for the remaining family. One activity based on her  reflection called for research into the care given by grandparents as  heads of households in today's society.
 
And that's the VOA Special English Education Report, written by Jerilyn  Watson. Go to voaspecialenglish.com to find a link to the One World  Education website, where you can read some of the student reflections.  I'm Jim Tedder.
