Haven't signed into your Scholastic account before?
Teachers, not yet a subscriber?
Subscribers receive access to the website and print magazine.
You are being redirecting to Scholastic's authentication page...
Announcements & Tutorials
Explore Primary Sources
How Students and Families Can Log In
1 min.
Setting Up Student View
Sharing Articles with Your Students
2 min.
Interactive Activities
4 min.
Sharing Videos with Students
Using Upfront with Educational Apps
5 min.
Join Our Facebook Group!
Exploring the Archives
Powerful Differentiation Tools
3 min.
World and U.S. Almanac & Atlas
Subscriber Only Resources
Access this article and hundreds more like it with a subscription to The New York TImes Upfront magazine.
LESSON PLAN
‘The Best Reporter in America’
Skill
Pairing a Primary & Secondary Source
Read the Article
Nellie Bly’s 1887 exposé of the conditions at a women’s asylum led to lasting reform—and helped pave the way for modern investigative journalism.
Before Reading
1. Set FocusPose this essential question: How do journalists help hold powerful people and institutions accountable for their actions?
2. List VocabularyShare some of the challenging vocabulary words in the article (see below). Encourage students to use context to infer meanings as they read.
3. EngagePoll students on whether they would be willing to go undercover at a mental health institution to report on patient abuse by medical staff. Prompt them to share why they would or would not be willing.
Analyze the Article
4. Read and DiscussAsk students to read the Upfront article about Nellie Bly and her exposé of abuses at a mental health asylum. Review why the article is a secondary source. (It was written by someone who didn’t personally experience or witness the events.) Then pose these critical-thinking questions:
5. Use the Primary SourcesProject, distribute, or assign in Google Classroom the PDF Abuse in the Asylum, which features an excerpt from Bly’s book, Ten Days in a Mad-House, about her experiences at the asylum in New York. Discuss what makes the excerpt a primary source. (It provides firsthand evidence concerning the topic.) Have students read the excerpt and answer the questions below (which appear on the PDF without answers).
Extend & Assess
6. Writing PromptBased on the article, what is investigative reporting? What are some ways this type of reporting has shaped public opinion and public policy? Explain in a brief essay.
7. QuizUse the quiz to assess comprehension.
8. Classroom DebateWas it ethical for Bly to have entered the asylum, sweatshops, and other places under false pretenses?
9. Research WritersHave different groups research Ida B. Wells, Ida Tarbell, and Upton Sinclair. Bring the class together to share findings and discuss what these three writers and Nellie Bly had in common and how they differed.
Download a PDF of this Lesson Plan