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Writing in the Disciplines

The CWE Digital Dashboard provides links to a variety of resources. Mouse over the icons to the right to view the resource type each represents. MSU CWE Handouts Print Resources (e.g., books, articles) PowerPoint or Other Slide Presentations Wikis PDFs (Adobe Acrobat) Videos Tutorials and Exercises Podcasts Websites

OVERVIEW

Each discipline has its own style, structure and format when it comes to academic writing. This section provides resources on writing in specific discplines, broken down into the following four general academic categories: Business & Communication, Humanities, Social Sciences, and Sciences.

The Humanities category is further broken down into common rhetorical writing tasks in that discipline: analysis, argument & persuasion, cause & effect, classification, comparison & contrast, definition, description, and narrative.

Cross RefAlso see: Citing Sources for discipline-specific citation styles | Specific Types of Writing for common non-academic writing resources such as writing for email, for the web, for presentations, etc.

website Approaching an Assignment in Any Discipline (Bedford St. Martin's)
PDF

Model Papers (PDF format) (Hacker A Writer's Reference companion website)
Sample papers include: MLA papers, MLA Argument Papers, MLA Analysis Papers, MLA Literature Papers, MLA Paper-in-Progress, MLA Sample Outline, MLA Annotated Bibliography, APA Papers, APA Annotated Bibliography, CMS Paper, and CSE Paper.

website Sample documents in design (Re:Writing from Bedford/St. Martin's)
Sample documents in Business and Technical Writing, Humanities, Applied Sciences, Literature
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BUSINESS & COMMUNICATION

website Business Writing (Writing@CSU)
An online writing guide about writing for business. Sections address writing business letters, resumes, press releases, and executive summaries.
tutorial Business Writing Tutorial (Writing@CSU)
Online activities for "writers who are writing in business." Specific tasks addressed are letters, memos, and press releases. Site Access: To access these exercises, you need to register with Writing@CSU. Registration is fast and simple.
website Communication Studies (The Writing Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
"This handout describes some steps for planning and writing papers in communication studies courses."
website Writing for a North American Business Audience (Purdue OWL)
Resource written particularly for non-North American business writers
website Writing for an Indian Business Audience (Purdue OWL)
Resource written particularly for business writers doing business in India or with Indian companies
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HUMANITIES

Resources for writing in the Humanities are broken down into the following sections. See resources for each below.

HUMANITIES > GENERAL

website Writing in the Humanities (The Institute for Writing & Rhetoric, Darmouth College)
This is the introductory page to a collection of resources on writing papers for fields within the humanities. The information focuses on issues that impact writing academic papers in these and related disciplines: Art History, English, Film, Music, Religion, and Philosophy.
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HUMANITIES > ART & ART HISTORY

website Art History (The Institute for Writing & Rhetoric, Darmouth College)
This handout explores the challenges and purposes of writing about art.
website Art History (The Writing Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
"This handout discusses several common types of art history assignments, and talks about various strategies and resources that will help you write your art history papers."
website A Guide to Writing about Art (Univ. of Iowa Writing Center)
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HUMANITIES > DANCE

website Guidelines for Viewing Dance; Writing Critiques for Dance Performances (University of Richmond Writing Center and Myra Daleng & Anne Van Gelder, Richmond Department of Theater & Dance)
Ideas and suggestions for writing a critique of a dance performance. One of the most interesting sections of the handout is the "Dance Critique Pet Peeves" that lists words and phrases to avoid when writing a dance critique. There is also a checklist for writing a critique at the end.
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HUMANITIES > DRAMA

website Drama (The Writing Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
"This handout identifies common questions about drama, discusses the elements of drama that are most often discussed in theater classes, provides a few strategies for planning and writing an effective paper, and identifies various resources for research in theater history and dramatic criticism."
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HUMANITIES > FILM

website Film (The Institute for Writing & Rhetoric, Darmouth College)
This handout explores the challenges and purposes of writing about film.
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HUMANITIES > LITERATURE

website Literature (The Writing Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
"This handout describes some steps for planning and writing papers about fiction texts."
website Book Review (The Writing Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
"This handout will help you write a book review, a report or essay that offers a critical perspective on a text. It offers a process and suggests some strategies for writing book reviews. "
website Literaure Reviews (The Writing Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
"This handout will explain what a literature review is and offer insights into the form and construction of a literature review in the humanities, social sciences, and sciences. "
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HUMANITIES > MUSIC

website Music (The Institute for Writing & Rhetoric, Darmouth College)
This handout explores the challenges and purposes of writing about music.
website Writing about Music (Univ. of Iowa Writing Center)
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HUMANITIES > POETRY

website Poetry Explications (The Writing Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
Official Description: "A poetry explication is a relatively short analysis which describes the possible meanings and relationships of the words, images, and other small units that make up a poem. Writing an explication is an effective way for a reader to connect a poem's plot and conflicts with its structural features. This handout reviews some of the important techniques of approaching and writing a poetry explication, and includes parts of two sample explications."
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HUMANITIES > PHILOSOPHY

website Philosophy (The Institute for Writing & Rhetoric, Darmouth College)
This handout explores the challenges and purposes of writing about philosophy
website Philosophy (The Writing Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
"This handout discusses common types of philosophy assignments and strategies and resources that will help you write your philosophy papers."
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HUMANITIES > RELIGION

website Religion (The Institute for Writing & Rhetoric, Darmouth College)
This handout explores "the challenges and purposes of writing in religion."
website Religious Studies (The Writing Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
"This handout will help you to write research papers in religious studies."
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HUMANITIES > RHETORICAL TASKS

analysis | argument & persuasion | cause & effect | classification | comparison & contrast | definition, |description | narrative

In academic writing, one can be asked to do many different types of writing. Some papers have you conducting research, while others require you to formulate an argument or write a critique, and some often have you do a combination of research and argument. This section includes resources on the following specific types of academic writing: analysis, argument & persuasion, cause & effect, classification, comparison & contrast, definition, description, and narrative. (See Conducting Research for resources on wriing research papers.)

Analysis

website How to Analyze a Text (Goshen College English Dept.)
PDF How to Write a Literary Analysis Essay (PDF) (Gwynedd-Mercy College (Rptd. from Bucks County Community College)
website Writing a Literary Analysis Paper (Univ. of Iowa Writing Center)
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Argument & Persuasion

website Argument (Writing@CSU)
An online writing guide to "help writers better understand how to plan, organize, develop, support and revise a written argument." Sections of the guide address the parts of an argument, the Toulmin Method, and even adapting the argument to the audience.
tutorial Argument Tutorial (Writing@CSU)
Online activities to "help writers better understand how to plan, organize, develop, support and revise a written argument." To access these exercises, you need to register with Writing@CSU. Registration is fast and simple.
website The Argumentative Essay (Purdue OWL)
website Establishing Arguments (Purdue OWL)
website Writing an Effective Thesis Statement: The Six-Step Method (for persuasive essays) (Univ. of Iowa Writing Center)
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Cause & Effect

website A Brief Guide to Writing Cause & Effect Essays (Roane State Community College)
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Classification

   
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Comparison & Contrast

website How to Write a Comparative Analysis (Writing Center at Harvard University)
website Comparing/Contrasting (The Writing Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
Official Description: "This handout will help you first to determine whether a particular assignment is asking for comparison/contrast and then to generate a list of similarities and differences, decide which similarities and differences to focus on, and organize your paper so that it will be clear and effective. It will also explain how you can (and why you should) develop a thesis that goes beyond "Thing A and Thing B are similar in many ways but different in others."
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Definition

website

Definition Essay (Northland Community College)

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Descriptive

website Things to Consider as you Write your Descriptive Essay (St. Cloud State University)
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Narrative

website A Brief Guide to Writing Narrative Essays (Roane State Community College)
website The Narrative Essay (Purdue OWL)
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SOCIAL SCIENCES

website Anthropology (The Writing Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
"This handout briefly situates anthropology as a discipline of study within the social sciences. It provides an introduction to the kinds of writing that you might encounter in your anthropology courses, describes some of the expectations that your instructors may have, and suggests some ways to approach your assignments. It also includes links to information on citation practices in anthropology and resources for writing anthropological research papers."
website History (The Writing Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
"This handout was written with several goals in mind: to explain what historians do and how they approach the writing process; to encourage you to think about your history instructor's expectations of you; and to offer some strategies to help you write effectively in history courses."
website History (The Institute for Writing & Rhetoric, Darmouth College)
Description: This handout explores the challenges and purposes of writing about history.
website Sociology (The Writing Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
"This handout introduces you to the wonderful world of writing sociology. Before you can write a clear and coherent sociology paper, you need a firm understanding of the assumptions and expectations of the discipline. You need to know your audience, the way they view the world and how they order and evaluate information. So, without further ado, let's figure out just what sociology is, and how one goes about writing it."
website Sociology (The Institute for Writing & Rhetoric, Darmouth College)
Description: This handout explores the challenges and purposes of writing about sociology.
website Writing in the Social Sciences (The Institute for Writing & Rhetoric, Darmouth College)
This is the introductory page to a collection of resources on writing papers for fields within the social sciences.
website Writing in Political Science: An Introduction (Dave Roberts, UR Writing Fellow ’07, University of Richmond Writing Center)
A guide that dissects what is involved in writing in the field of political science.
website Writing in Political Science (The Writing Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
"This handout will help you to recognize and to follow writing practices and standards in political science. The first step toward accomplishing this goal is to develop a basic understanding of political science and the kind of work political scientists do."
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SCIENCES

tutorial Science Writing (Writing@CSU)
Online activities for writers in the sciences. Specific tasks addressed include generating ideas, using desciption in science writing, revising organization in science writing, and revising a science argument.
Site Access: To access these exercises, you need to register with Writing@CSU. Registration is fast and simple.
website Writing Biology Laboratory Reports (Writer’s Web - University of Richmond Writing Center)
A guide for writing biology laboratory reports with secions on writing the abstract, the introduction, materials and methods, results, discussion, and works cited.
website Writing in Science (Writing@CSU)
An online writing guide that addresses the challengese and issues involved in scientific writing. Sections include Writing the Scientific-Format Paper and Achieving the Scientific-Voice.
website Writing in the Sciences (The Institute for Writing & Rhetoric, Darmouth College)
This is the introductory page to a collection of resources on writing papers for fields within the sciences. The information focuses on issues that impact writing academic papers in these and related disciplines: Biology and Chemistry.
website Writing in Science (Writing@CSU)
An online writing guide that addresses the challengese and issues involved in scientific writing. Sections include Writing the Scientific-Format Paper and Achieving the Scientific-Voice.
website Writing in the Sciences (The Writing Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
"Every element of style that is accepted and encouraged in general academic writing is also considered good practice in scientific writing. The major difference between science writing and writing in other academic fields is the relative importance placed on certain stylistic elements. This handout details the most critical aspects of scientific writing and provides some strategies for evaluating and improving your scientific prose."
website

"Write your Writing: How to sharpen your writing and make your manuscripts more engaging" (The Scientist.com Magazine of the Life Sciences)
Contributor Judith Swan offers "ways to improve your writing practices and tips on how to align your writing to your readers’ expectations. *subscription required for access

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MATHEMATICS

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AMS Author Resource Center (American Mathematical Society [AMS])
Provides links and tools to assist in writing, editing, illustrating, and publishing mathematical works.

PDF

AMS Author Handbook (if this link does not work, you can download the PDF directly here) (American Mathematical Society)
This is the most widely recognized handbook for writing in mathematics.

website

Guide to AMS Editor's Package (American Mathematical Society)
This link from the AMS website covers formatting for papers/monographs using LaTeX software, a common program for setting math type used here at MSU. It also provides templates to create title pages, bibliographies, etc. for LaTeX users.

website

Overview of AMS-LaTeX Software (American Mathematical Society)
This is an overview of the AMS-LaTeX software.

website

MRef (American Mathematical Society)
This is a citation generator for standard references that include links to the MathSciNet database.

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