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The APSA Congressional Fellowship: Value for Faculty from Teaching Collegesand Universities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 June 2008

Roger P. Rose
Affiliation:
Benedictine University, APSA Congressional Fellow, 2007–2008

Extract

During its 55-year history, the APSA Congressional Fellowship Program (CFP) has influencedmuch of the best work written about Congress. Top congressional and legislative scholarslike David Mayhew, Alan Rosenthal, David Rohde, Lawrence Dodd, and Barbara Sinclair, to namejust a few, were strongly influenced by their experience as legislative fellows on CapitolHill. To cite the most prominent example, David Mayhew remarked that his fellowship year wasintegral to his writing of Congress: the Electoral Connection: “Absent myexperience as an APSA Congressional Fellow in 1967–1968, there is not the slightest chance Iwould have conceived or written The Electoral Connection” (quoted in Biggs 2003, 143).

Type
Association News
Copyright
Copyright © The American Political Science Association 2008

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References

Biggs, Jeffrey R. 2003. A Congress of Fellows: Fifty Years of the American Political Science Association Congressional Fellowship Program. Washington, D.C.: American Political Science Association.Google Scholar
Fairweather, James S. 2002. “The Mythologies of Faculty Productivity: Implications for Institutional Policy and Decision Making.” The Journal of Higher Education 73:2648.Google Scholar
Lamport, Mark A. 1993. “Student-Faculty Informal Interaction and the Effect on College Student Outcomes: A Review of the Literature.” Adolescence 28 (112): 971–90.Google ScholarPubMed
Partnership for Public Service. “A Call to Serve.” 2008. http://www.ourpublicservice.org/OPS/ (May 20, 2008).Google Scholar