• Nellie Bly and Investigative Journalism for Kids
Author(s): Ellen Mahoney
Format: Paperback
No. of Pages: 144
Publisher: Chicago Review Press
Language: English
Date Published: 2015-05-01
Dimensions: 215 x 279 x 10mm
Publication City/Country: Chicago, United States
Edition:
Illustrations:

In the late 1800s, the daring young reporter Elizabeth Cochrane known by the pen name Nellie Bly faked insanity so she could be committed to a mental institution and secretly report on the awful conditions there. This and other highly publicized investigative stunts laid the groundwork for a new kind of journalism in the early 1900s, called muckraking, dedicated to exposing social, political, and economic ills in the United States. In "Nellie Bly and Investigative" "Journalism for Kids "budding reporters learn about the major figures of the muckraking era: the bold and audacious Bly, one of the most famous women in the world in her day; social reformer and photojournalist Jacob Riis; monopoly buster Ida Tarbell; antilynching crusader Ida B. Wells; and Upton Sinclair, whose classic book "The Jungle" created a public outcry over the dangerous and unsanitary conditions of the early meatpacking industry. Young readers will also learn about more contemporary reporters, from Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein to Amy Goodman, who have carried on the muckraking tradition, and will get excited about the ever-changing world of journalism and the power of purposeful writing. Twenty-one creative activities encourage and engage a future generation of muckrakers. Kids can make and keep a reporter s notebook; write a letter to the editor; craft a great ideas box; create a Jacob Riis style photo essay; and much more."
Book Info
Author Ellen Mahoney
Date Published 2015-05-01
Dimensions 215 x 279 x 10mm
First Author Ellen Mahoney
Format Paperback
ISBN 9781613749975
Language English
No. of Pages 144
Publication City/Country Chicago, United States
Publisher Chicago Review Press

Nellie Bly and Investigative Journalism for Kids

  • $588