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The
Online Manual for Writing Across the Curriculum
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Bibliography of Sources for Writing Across
the Curriculum
Political Science Writing Resources
Biddle, A. W., & Holland, K. M. (with T. Fulwiler). (1987). Writer's
guide: Political science. Lexington, MA: D. C. Heath.
Bigelow, Bill and Linda Christiansen (1987). Write to Think: Teaching
about Social Conflict Through Imaginative Writing. The Writing Notebook:
11-14.
Brodsky, D., & Meagher, E. (1987). Journals and political science.
In T. Fulwiler (Ed.), The journal book (pp. 375- 386). Portsmouth,
NH: Heinemann.
Farlow, D. E. (1989). Writing a research paper in political science.
Glenview, IL: Scott.
Klem, Elizabeth and Charles Moran (1994). Whose machines are these?
Politics, power, and the new technology. Pedagogy in the Age of Politics.
Eds. Patricia A. Sullivan and Donna J. Qualley. Urbana, IL: National
Council of Teachers. 73-87.
Mahoney, M. (1979). Essay writing in political education. Teaching
Political Science, 7, 51- 72.
Mortensen, Peter (1994). Representations of literacy and region: Narrating
Another America. Pedagogy in the Age of Politics. Eds.
Patricia A. Sullivan and Donna J. Qualley. Urbana, IL: National Council
of Teachers. 100-120.
Paine, Charles (1999). The resistant writer: Rhetoric as immunity,
1850 to the present. New York: State University of New York Press.
Pittendrign, A. S. (1991). A model for teaching writing in large introductory
political science classes. Political Science Teacher, 2, 5- 10.
Qualley, Donna J. (1994). Being two places at once: Feminism and the
development of both/and perspectives. Pedagogy in the
Age of Politics. Eds. Patricia A. Sullivan and Donna J. Qualley. Urbana,
IL: National Council of Teachers 25-42.
Selcher, W. A., & McClellan, E. F. (1990). Sequential writing
assignments in international relations and American government survey
courses. Political Science Teacher, 3, 14- 16.
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