Batro, a 43-year-old kindergarten teacher in the Tibet autonomous region, recently boarded an airplane for the first time and flew to Shanghai.
Finding building materials suitable for use on the "Roof of the World" has always been an engineering challenge - let alone actually putting them together.
Park ranger Losonchokyi carries nothing but a camera, telescope, flask of butter tea and a small satchel of tsampa - roasted barley flour - during his daily patrols at a nature reserve in Qinghai province.
China's blossoming love affair with the outdoors life - which is being propelled by a steady rise in living standards, especially among urbanites - is helping bring benefits to underprivileged rural regions.
The gaokao, China's national college entrance exam, takes place this week. It is a make-or-break experience for millions of prospective students, who undertake as many as three days of intensive tests that, in many cases, will determine their future.
I took the gaokao in 2007, when assistive measures for people with disabilities were basically unheard of.
A retired physics teacher is putting her scientific mind to work to help youngsters with a wide assortment of cognitive disabilities.
Liu Daye, 53, spent 11 years felling trees in Hainan province's Jianfengling Mountains - home to China's largest old-growth tropical rainforest. Now he spends his time preventing others from doing damage to the same area.
An abandoned electroplating factory in Shenyang, capital of Liaoning province, has become a popular spot for artists to show off their talents.
In April, Yin Min-chi, a sophomore at Tsinghua University in Beijing who comes from Taiwan, spent five days showing a group of high school graduates from the island around the university campus and China's capital.
Since 2016, the number of students from the mainland enrolling at universities in Taiwan has declined every year. As a result, the island's education authority is relaxing its policies to attract more students.
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