No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

- Advertisement -spot_img

Popular Articles

education

Six Costa Rican students receive AFS-CRUSA scholarships for year in U.S.

A new group of scholarship recipients are U.S.-bound.

Parents padlock schools in Costa Rica to protest sex ed programs

Costa Rica's sex ed classes are optional for public school students.

New scholarship fund to send Costa Rican students to the United States

The new fund will invest $1.45 million over four years to offer technical scholarships to public-school students.

A message to women: ‘Don’t be the one clipping your own wings’

The Tico Times speaks with Mariana Santos, the founder of international digital media support network Chicas Poderosas.

Cambiando paradigmas en La Carpio por medio del voluntariado

At the request of La Carpio community leaders, we are presenting this series in translation for Spanish-language readers. Read the original English series, which we...

Conozca a Alicia Avilés, la líder inmigrante y perseverante del crecimiento cultural en La Carpio

En la segunda parte de nuestra serie sobre SIFAIS, entrevistamos a la líder inspiradora Alicia Avilés.

Reconstruyendo la comunidad de La Carpio por medio de la educación cultural

Iniciamos una serie explorando cómo la organización SIFAIS está logrando una transformación profunda en la comunidad de La Carpio.

La Carpio’s cultural rebellion

In the fourth and final installment in our series on SIFAIS and its work in La Carpio, we ask a simple question: what would each Costa Rican have to do to replicate this project in needy communities nationwide?

Changing paradigms in La Carpio through volunteering

In Part Three of our four-part series, meet the volunteers and students behind SIFAIS, the innovative program transforming La Carpio through cultural education.

Meet Alicia Avilés, the perseverant immigrant leader of La Carpio’s cultural growth

In part two of our series on the SIFAIS organization in La Carpio, we sit down with the inspiration behind the movement: Alicia Avilés, who came to Costa Rica from Nicaragua 20 years ago.

Latest news

- Advertisement -spot_img