In 1996 she, and her colleagues at the Dayton Daily News, were nominated as finalists for the Pulitzer Prize in Reporting for "Military Secrets" and "Prisoners on the Payroll," a series of investigations into handling misconduct cases in the military. They won Harvard University's Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting, for the same series that year.[8][9]
She was a books editor, and editor of the editorial page at the Chicago Sun-Times.[10] Reed left the Chicago Sun-Times in 2008, unable to fulfill her promise to change the editorial stance from conservative to progressive, having previously vowed to '"return the paper to its "liberal, working-class roots" and to add "seats to our editorial board so that board members ... reflect [Chicago's] diversity."'[11][12]
In 2018, she won the Chicago Writers Book of the Year award, for Poison Girls, in the traditional fictional category.[13]
Academic career
Reed was visiting professor of journalism at the University of St. Thomas, and was previously an assistant professor of journalism at Northern Michigan University, (NMU) and its adviser to NMU's student newspaper The North Wind for the 2014–15 academic year.[5]
She was a Fulbright U.S. Scholar in Kyiv, Ukraine, (2016-2017) where she taught investigative reporting and immersion journalism. In the fall of 2019, she returned to Ukraine, as a Fulbright Specialist teaching investigative journalism. According to her biography, she has plans to go to Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan as a Fulbright Scholar, in 2021.[5]
Controversy
Reed was voted out of the position as the adviser at Northern Michigan University (NMU) the end of the school year by the newspaper's board of directors, for what Reed claimed was retaliation on the investigative journalism she was teaching her students.[14][15][16] Reed brought the board members to federal court in June 2015, but she later pulled out from the case when the judge denied a preliminary injunction that would have reinstated her as adviser.[17] Reed advocated for a new law that offers further protections for student speech and prevents schools and universities from retaliating against media advisors for material written by students.[18]
1996 Finalist, Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting, (with Carol Hernandez, Jeff Nesmith and Cheryl Reed) Dayton Daily News, "Military Secrets" and "Prisoners on the Payroll", investigations into handling misconduct cases in the military[8]
1996 Winner, Harvard University's Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting, (with Carol Hernandez, Jeff Nesmith and Cheryl Reed) Dayton Daily News, "Military Secrets" and "Prisoners on the Payroll"[9]
2018 Winner, Book of the Year, for Traditional Fiction, Poison Girls.[13]