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Moore makes it clear that one of the book’s primary purposes is to serve as a memorial to the dial painters. Why does Moore believe that such a memorial is important? In your answer, cite details, quotations, and evidence from the text. Consider these points in formulating a response:
Teaching Suggestion: This prompt asks students to consider Moore’s various purposes in writing The Radium Girls. “She feels sorry for them” and “She is mad about what happened to them” may be initial reactions to this prompt, but a thoughtful response requires deeper thinking about characterization, theme, and audience. Since each of these requires a review of the text for evidence, students might work cooperatively to divide up responsibility for the bullet points if time is short. Students can then report back on their findings to a small group or to the entire class before attempting to respond to the main prompt question.
Differentiation Suggestion: Students with reading fluency or attentional learning differences who benefit from targeted strategies for reviewing a large section of text might gather evidence with a partner or small group. If students will be responding to the prompt in writing, those who benefit from accommodations in written expression might answer each section of the prompt with a few sentences rather than creating a fully-developed, essay-style response.
Use this activity to engage all types of learners, while requiring that they refer to and incorporate details from the text over the course of the activity.
“Media Portrayals of the Radium Girls”
In this activity, students will demonstrate their understanding of themes related to The Media’s Role in Shaping Public Opinion and in Politics and Technological Optimism and the Changing Perception of Radium by creating news articles representing the way media of the time responded to the dial painters’ claims.
When the media’s tone regarding radium and the dial painters’ claims changes, public perception also shifts, making the Radium Girls’ path toward justice an easier one. Imagine that you are a journalist in the early 20th century. From this perspective, write two articles of about 250 words each, covering the dial painters’ claims: one from before 1928 and one from after 1933.
Write Your Articles:
Read and Review:
Read one set of articles written by a peer. Then answer the following questions:
1. How do these articles use language and detail to demonstrate the change in the media’s attitude? Are there any improvements you can suggest to strengthen the contrast between the two articles or their accuracy in portraying the media’s attitude shift?
2. How easy is it to identify the two textual events being used as the focus of these two articles? Are there any key figures or events that might be added to these articles to strengthen their relationship to Moore’s text?
Teaching Suggestion: Students should note the “Read and Review” questions at the end of the activity before drafting their articles so that they anticipate and incorporate the specific techniques their peers will be evaluating. This “Read and Review” section can also be used as a form of peer editing, if students will have time for revision before they turn in their work for evaluation.
Differentiation Suggestion: Students with anxiety or perfectionism may benefit from assistance with choosing two events from the many available. A prepared “shortlist” of possibilities or pre-assigned topics may be helpful. More literal thinkers may benefit from a brief period of discussion and a few examples on how to convincingly create the required perspective. Students who benefit from accommodations in written expression might complete the activity in stages, first writing a list of ideas for each article, then transforming their lists into articles; these preliminary lists might serve as an alternative form of assessment for students who do not fully demonstrate their understanding in more elaborate written forms.
Use these essay questions as writing and critical thinking exercises for all levels of writers, and to build their literary analysis skills by requiring textual references throughout the essay.
Differentiation Suggestion: For English learners or struggling writers, strategies that work well include graphic organizers, sentence frames or starters, group work, or oral responses.
Scaffolded Essay Questions
Student Prompt: Write a short (1-3 paragraph) response using one of the bulleted outlines below. Cite details from the text over the course of your response that serve as examples and support.
1. Each of the book’s 3 main parts has its own title.
2. Several times in the narrative, corporations team up with scientists to investigate the health effects of radium paint.
3. Science fiction of the early 20th century is referred to as “Radium Age” science fiction. Conduct research on this genre and its characteristics.
Full Essay Assignments
Student Prompt: Write a structured and well-developed essay. Include a thesis statement, at least three main points supported by textual details, and a conclusion.
1. The Radium Girls takes place in the early part of the 20th century. How does Moore keep the reader engaged in a narrative about events that happened such a long time ago? How does she use details of plot and characterization to create emotional impacts on readers? How does she use structure to create suspense and narrative tension? How do other narrative techniques impact the reading experience? Write an essay analyzing how Moore creates reader engagement. Comment on how this engagement amplifies the reader’s response to the book’s thematic interest in The Failure of the System To Protect Workers From Corporations. Support your arguments with both quoted and paraphrased evidence drawn from throughout the text, making sure to cite all quoted material.
2. The dial painters working with the radium paint are mostly women from lower-class backgrounds, and many of them are also recent immigrants. How do gender and social status contribute to their vulnerability? Why are these jobs important to them? Analyze the reaction from the medical establishment and their employers when they begin to get sick, and consider their access to legal representation. Write an essay analyzing how gender and social status contribute to the victimization of the dial painters. Support your arguments with evidence drawn from throughout the text, making sure to cite any quoted material.
3. Moore focuses attention on both the women’s bodies and their individual personalities. How does Moore use physical description to emphasize the importance of their bodies? What is Moore’s purpose in giving graphic details about the effects of radium on the women’s bodies and describing the invasiveness of the medical testing they undergo? How does Moore also undercut the perception of women-as-bodies? How is the metaphor of the women as “ghosts” significant? Write an essay analyzing Moore’s purpose in focusing on these women as both bodily objects and human subjects. Support your arguments with evidence drawn from throughout the text, making sure to cite any quoted material.
Multiple Choice and Long Answer Questions create ideal opportunities for whole-text review, exams, or summative assessments.
Multiple Choice
1. Throughout the narrative, to what idea are the young workers metaphorically compared?
A) Clouds
B) Flowers
C) Vampires
D) Ghosts
2. What point does Moore make by juxtaposing the incident with the forgotten vial of radium in the Prologue with later scenes of lip-pointing and face-painting with the radium paint?
A) The wages paid in the factories were a more powerful motivator than fear of radium.
B) The women in the factories were too young to take health risks seriously.
C) Scientific concerns about radium were not communicated to the working class.
D) Even at the end of the 1800s, scientists were aware of the dangers of radium.
3. What is similar about the outcomes when Radium Dial Corporation tests workers after Marguerite’s case against USRC and when they again test workers after the settlement of the 1928 USRC trial?
A) The workers who test positive are fired.
B) The tests are used as the basis for new lawsuits.
C) The testers deliberately falsify the results.
D) The workers are not told the results of the tests.
4. What point is conveyed through the detailed descriptions of legal actions in this book?
A) Judges often unfairly favor corporate defendants, while juries are often biased in favor of working-class plaintiffs.
B) Because of the way laws are structured, bringing suit against a corporation is a difficult and complex undertaking.
C) Attorneys representing plaintiffs against major corporations are often solely motivated by potential monetary damages.
D) The structure of the legal system creates a balanced tension between economic and personal interests.
5. Which is an important lesson the women learn as they pursue justice?
A) Both plaintiffs and defendants can manipulate science in their favor.
B) The most famous lawyers are not always the most competent.
C) Obtaining justice is more likely when the media is on your side.
D) The public is not always able to see clearly where its own best interests lie.
6. Which is a symbol used paradoxically in this text to convey both justice and injustice?
A) Light
B) Flowers
C) Color
D) Machinery
7. Which statement represents the most accurate characterization of the doctors and scientists in this story?
A) They are doing their best with the limited knowledge available at the time.
B) Although many are honest, others misuse their power in dishonest ways.
C) Their biases against the poor prevent them from making reliable judgments.
D) Many allow government agencies to pressure them into falsifying their work.
8. What larger struggle does media link the dial painters’ plight to?
A) Discrimination against immigrants
B) Women’s rights
C) Workers’ rights
D) Protecting the environment
9. Which phrase is used as a refrain at the end of several chapters?
A) “Lip, dip, paint”
B) “Paint, lip, point”
C) “Line, point, line”
D) “Lip, line, dip”
10. Throughout most of the book, who exercises the most control over radium’s image?
A) Scientists
B) Media
C) Government
D) Corporations
11. To what idea does the book point as the main reason for the failure of corporations like Radium Dial to protect workers?
A) Ignorance about radium’s dangers
B) The desire to increase profits
C) A fear of criminal prosecution
D) Disdain for immigrants and the poor
12. Whom does the book portray as the most honest and moral?
A) Grossman
B) Flinn
C) Roeder
D) Knef
13. In many cases, what characteristic do doctors blame for the dial painters’ illnesses?
A) Their ethnicity
B) Their socioeconomic status
C) Their gender
D) Their lack of education
14. Whose death was a turning point in the public’s attitude toward radium?
A) Marie Curie’s
B) Eben Byers’s
C) Mollie Maggia’s
D) Sabin von Sochocky’s
15. Which of these Radium Girls did not successfully obtain a settlement from her employer?
A) Pearl Payne
B) Inez Vallat
C) Catherine Donohue
D) Grace Fryer
Long Answer
Compose a response of 2-3 sentences, incorporating textual details to support your response.
1. What is the rhetorical purpose of the book’s “cause of death” motif, in which erroneous causes of death are listed for several dial painters?
2. How are the corporations in this book able to manipulate the system using a kind of “hierarchy of credibility”?
Multiple Choice
1. D (Various chapters)
2. C (Various chapters)
3. D (Various chapters)
4. B (Various chapters)
5. C (Various chapters)
6. A (Various chapters)
7. B (Various chapters)
8. C (Various chapters)
9. A (Various chapters)
10. D (Various chapters)
11. B (Various chapters)
12. A (Various chapters)
13. C (Various chapters)
14. B (Various chapters)
15. B (Various chapters)
Long Answer
1. The doctors’ assertions of causes of death like “syphilis” and “streptococcic poisoning” demonstrate that little information about radium was available and that little care was taken to investigate thoroughly. This underscores the powerlessness of the dial painters and the callousness of the systems around them. (Various chapters)
2. Radium Dial and USRC repeatedly pit the testimony of well-educated men of a higher socioeconomic status against the testimony of less-educated women of lower socioeconomic status, knowing that these men will generally be believed by courts, government regulators, and the media regardless of their ulterior motives and the women’s lived experiences. (Various chapters)
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