logo
It Isn't Freedom if It's Not for Everyone

It Isn't Freedom if It's Not for Everyone

New York Times05-07-2025
Every year I choose a university student to accompany me on my win-a-trip journey, which is meant to highlight issues that deserve more attention. My 2025 winner is Sofia Barnett, a recent Brown University graduate and a budding journalist. Her first essay was about girls in West Africa challenging the tradition of female genital mutilation. Here's her second, arguing that Western feminism should show more concern for global women's issues.
By Sofia Barnett, reporting from Sierra Leone
In Makeni, Sierra Leone, girls walk home from school with notebooks tucked under their arms and dust clinging to their socks. Their uniforms are clean but faded. Their routes are long. I met girls who walk five miles through washed-out roads to reach a classroom. Their futures depend on a fragile calculation — not just of effort, but of what they're willing to trade to keep learning.
Here, there are girls who drop out because they can't afford a sanitary pad. Girls who sell their bodies for the cost of a notebook. Some are proud of what they earn at night — seven U.S. dollars, maybe — because it helps them stay enrolled. But that's not opportunity. That's extortion under the veil of agency.
Another young woman, Tity Sannoh, told me menstruation is often where the trade begins. In the coastal town of Tombo, girls rely on boyfriends just to manage their period, she said. 'If you give them something, they will give you something in return.'
Safieyatu Kiadii, a 16-year-old girl from the village of Vonzua in Liberia, told me she dropped out of school after her father died. She now takes care of her mentally ill mother alone and lives with her in a one-room house. She isn't ready to bear a child, she told me, lifting her sleeve to show the birth control implant in her arm. She wants to become a nurse.
When I asked how girls learn about their bodies, most said they don't. Mabinty Thoronka, a 19-year-old from Freetown, told me her mother explained menstruation by saying only, 'If you allow a boy to touch you, you are going to get pregnant.'
Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

North Texas school district partners to offer flight training to teens
North Texas school district partners to offer flight training to teens

CBS News

timean hour ago

  • CBS News

North Texas school district partners to offer flight training to teens

Cedar Hill ISD is preparing to take students to new heights through a partnership with a local nonprofit that will launch a first-of-its-kind aviation program. The district has teamed up with Cedar Hill Dads Aviation, founded by longtime resident John Mays, to provide students with training and opportunities that could lead to real aviation careers. Mays, who earned his pilot's license later in life, said he hopes to inspire students who might not otherwise see aviation as possible. "I've always had a passion to fly ever since I was a little kid," Mays said. "What I want to do is invest in these kids and change the outlook of some who may never look up and say, 'I can do that.'" The nonprofit will work with sponsors to help cover the costs, making the program more affordable and accessible. Organizers hope that by the time students graduate, they will have earned at least a private pilot's license, with some possibly achieving more advanced certifications. The program begins next month with 15 students training to receive their drone operator licenses. By the next school year, it will expand to include ground school, simulations and hands-on flight lessons. To preview what's ahead, Mays even took Cedar Hill ISD Superintendent Dr. Maria Gammell on a flight. "It was exciting for me because I was like, 'Yeah, I want to fly!'" Gammell said. "But also, I need kids to know that this is real. You can do this." Gammell said programs like this provide students with opportunities to explore their futures. "When kids are in kindergarten, we ask them what they want to be when they grow up," she said. "What we have to do is give kids access to opportunities to explore who they will become. For me, this is another avenue to do that." Cedar Hill Dads Aviation hopes to expand to other North Texas districts, with the long-term vision of creating one of the nation's leading aviation training programs for high school students. "Cedar Hill Aviation High School," Mays said. "The airlines will be coming for us for their pilots. Period."

Chicago CRED violence prevention program participants earn high school diplomas
Chicago CRED violence prevention program participants earn high school diplomas

CBS News

time2 hours ago

  • CBS News

Chicago CRED violence prevention program participants earn high school diplomas

Some Chicagoans working to turn their lives around celebrated a big accomplishment Thursday as they earned their high school diplomas. Chicago CRED, a nonprofit dedicated to reducing gun violence in Chicago, hosted a graduation ceremony Thursday at the South Shore Cultural Center, 7059 S. South Shore Dr. A total of 58 new high school graduates were honored at the event, along with several people who graduated earlier in the year, participants in other community violence intervention programs, and staff members who have earned new education credentials. In all, 112 people were honored Thursday, CRED said. All the grads participate in CRED's violence prevention program. The organization helped the new grads earn their diplomas online. On Thursday, family members, life coaches, and outreach workers were all there to cheer on the graduates. Since CRED was founded in 2016, 400 participants have earned high school diplomas through the Penn Foster virtual high school program, CRED said. Many participants and CRED staff have also pursued online college courses through a partnership with Southern New Hampshire University.

Colorado student performance improving but far from goal, test scores show
Colorado student performance improving but far from goal, test scores show

CBS News

time6 hours ago

  • CBS News

Colorado student performance improving but far from goal, test scores show

More public school students are meeting grade-level expectations on the Colorado Measures of Academic Success. The state's CMAS and Scholastic Aptitude Test scores were released Thursday, and students are performing at or above pre-pandemic levels in most grades and subjects. The tests were administered in April. Still, fewer than half of public school students are meeting grade-level expectations set by the state and measured on the CMAS test. Achievement in math is nowhere near where educators want it to be - fewer than four in 10 fourth graders are meeting expectations in math, for example. But there have been solid gains after the state invested more heavily to provide math tutors and more tools to teachers to help kids catch up. "The fact that we've seen gains year over year, over year, at this point, I think it's a real indication that the focus, the legislation, the resources are really paying off," said Colorado Education Commissioner Susana Cordova. The results show that longstanding achievement gaps between student groups persist and remain too wide, according to Cordova. "How do we accelerate growth, particularly for the groups of students who are furthest from where they need to be? That improvement is not happening equally across the state, and it's a place we know that we need more support and we need to learn from the places that are doing the best work in that," said Cordova. For multilingual learners, students whose native language is not English, achievement was low across grades and subjects, with most students in the lower performance levels. Cordova said what was particularly concerning was that many new-to-country students whose first language is Spanish were also performing poorly on the Spanish test. She said cohorts of educators across districts will work together to tackle the challenge, to ensure these students have the right supports they need to be successful in school. "To be able to have a foundation in their first language, to be able to make that strong transition into English. I think it's an area we're going to continue to apply great focus on for our multilingual learners if we hope to see them perform at levels that we know they can," said Cordova. Another bright spot: SAT results for 11th-grade students improved in reading, writing, and math compared to last year, with more than 61% of 11th graders taking the SAT meeting reading and writing goals. The disaggregated results show that female students outperformed male students in English Language Arts, and males outperformed females in math. See complete results by school district, individual schools, and student groups online.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store