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Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005
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Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Dec 21, 2015

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Page 1: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses

Workshop for UMBC Faculty

June 6, 2005

Page 2: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Who should teach an interdisciplinary course, and how do you do it?

Guidelines and Best Practices

Page 3: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

ID Faculty

Flexibility

Patience

Resilience

Sensitivity to others

Risk-taking

Thick skin

Preference for diversity

Page 4: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Focusing Your Course

Themes

Topics

Comparisons

Problems

Issues

Page 5: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Common Course StructuresMultidisciplinary courses present disciplinary perspectives in serial fashion.Cross-disciplinary courses are courses in which one disciplinary perspective dominates the other(s).Adisciplinary courses attempt to gain holistic picture without specific attention to disciplines.Interdisciplinary courses work toward self-conscious integration of the disciplines.

Page 6: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Definition of Interdisciplinarity “A process of answering a question, solving

a problem, or addressing a topic that is too broad or complex to be dealt with adequately by a single discipline or profession.... IDS draws on disciplinary perspectives and integrates their insights through construction of a more comprehensive perspective” (Klein & Newell).

Page 7: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Challenges of ID WorkDistortion, misunderstanding of disciplinesUse of data, methods, theories out of contextUse of borrowings out of favor in their original contextIllusions of certainty about phenomena treated with caution or skepticism in their original disciplinesOver-reliance on one theory or perspectiveDismissal of contradictory evidence

Page 8: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Iron Law (Jonathan Z. Smith)

“Students shall not be expected to integrate anything that the faculty can’t or won’t.”

Page 9: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Discussion

What are the hopes, fears and concerns of a first year student?

A sophomore student?

A junior?

A senior?

Page 10: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Student Development Theory

First-year: concern with “correct” answers; only experts have answers; interdisciplinary means small classes, lively interaction

Sophomore/Juniors: some disciplines are more objective than others; ID is about specific courses that bring together different disciplinary views

Seniors: truth is contextual; student’s viewpoint is valued; ID = student’s ability to integrate knowledge from different courses, experiences

Page 11: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Process of ID Inquiry (Klein)INITIAL PHASE a. Define problem b. Determine goals, objectives, questionsCONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK a. Devise a plan b. Gather all current and relevant knowledgeSOCIAL LEARNING a. Clarify roles of team members b. Clarify differences in language, methods, tools

Page 12: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

ID Process of Inquiry

INTEGRATION

a. Use known techniques for integration

b. Triangulate depth, breadth and synthesis

c. Reflect on learning

Page 13: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Integrating Disciplines

New holistic understanding through new metaphors, terms, principles“Borrowing” from one discipline and applying that information to anotherConceptual frameworkIntegrative actionCreative integrationMeta-goals or sub-text of course

Page 14: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Course Planning

Consider a definition of IDS.Focus your course topic or theme (e.g., place, problem, concept, relationship, issue or debate).Determine which disciplinary perspectives will be used.Assemble team of experts from different disciplines.

Page 15: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Course Design

Try to let go of “coverage” model.Develop focusing question(s), and a limited set of key discipline-crossing concepts.Clarify key terms.Determine learning outcomes.Select readings.Develop learning activities, pedagogies, assignments to advance outcomes.

Page 16: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Course Materials

Explain how course is ID in the syllabus.

Explain how the course will help students meet goals of university and prepare them for life.

Make course design, organization, learning disciplinary contributions, outcomes and assessment explicit.

Page 17: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Course Sessions

Design sessions that explicitly analyze different disciplinary perspectives.Step back from the process to reflect.Model integration, and invite students to practice it.Bring in guests with differing disciplinary perspectives.Use diverse student expertise.

Page 18: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Assignments

Coach the process.

Provide models.

Be explicit about expectations.

Sequence assignments, when possible; but allow for some spontaneity too!

Provide some choice.

Page 19: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Faculty Development

Appoint course coordinator.Institute ongoing communication among faculty teaching course.Sit in on each other’s courses.Meet with faculty across disciplines who are teaching same or related courses.Consult professional literature and organizations.

Page 20: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Faculty Development

Create faculty mentors or peer coaches.

Use sabbatical leaves to visit institutions with lively interdisciplinary activity.

Develop internal grants for curriculum development.

Create reading groups, study groups, research networks.

Page 21: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Effective Pedagogical Approaches for ID Courses

Guidelines and Strategies

Page 22: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Different Approaches

Formal: long-term structures that are used throughout the term and guide the way the course is designed, such as formal cooperative learning or service-learning courses

Informal: short-term approaches that guide how specific class meetings are conducted, such as guest speaker, role-play or debate

Page 23: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Formal, Long-Term Structures

Team Teaching

Cooperative Learning

Inquiry-Based Learning

Service Learning

Learning Communities

Page 24: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Team Course Design & Teaching

Select faculty with appropriate personalities.Address personality differences head-on.Overcome disciplinary biases.Discuss educational philosophies of team members.Overcome status differences.Be aware of student game-playing.

Page 25: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Degrees of Integration

DEGREE LOW HIGH A R ------------------- Planning ------------------------- E -------------- Content Integration ----------------- A ------------------- Teaching ------------------------- S ------------------- Evaluation -----------------------

Page 26: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Roles for Team TeachersModel LearnerObserverCo-LecturerPanel MemberDiscussion or Co-Discussion LeaderCase Co-FacilitatorGroup FacilitatorGadfly Resource

Page 27: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Other Team-Teaching Guidelines

Meet regularly throughout course to reflect and plan.Model good teamwork and integration in front of the students.Use differences in viewpoints as learning opportunities for students.Reinforce and support one another as much as possible.

Page 28: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Cooperative Learning Definition

“The creation, analysis and systematic application of structures, or content-free ways of organizing social interaction in the classroom. Structures usually involve a series of steps, with proscribed behavior at each step.” (Spencer Kagan).

Page 29: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

ID Cooperative Learning Tips

Give assignments that can only be done effectively using multiple group members.Select group members that are diverse (e.g., disciplinary interests, personalities).Coach the process of interdisciplinary inquiry.Build trust; have groups process their work.Hold individuals accountable.

Page 30: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Formal Cooperative StructuresStudent Teams Achievement Division (STAD): Heterogeneous group works together to complete same teacher-designed lesson or test.Jigsaw: Each group member is given specialized, disciplinary area and must contribute to teacher-designed ID assignment.Group Investigation: Teacher presents ID problem; groups must come up with their own plan to address the problem, using multiple disciplines.

Page 31: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Inquiry-Based Learning

An orientation toward learning that is flexible and open and draws upon the varied skills and resources of the faculty and students, in which faculty are co-learners who guide and facilitate the student-driven, interdisciplinary learning experience.

Page 32: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Inquiry-Based Learning Steps

Create conducive climate.

Select and explore a theme.

Form a valid question.

Design an investigative plan, using ID inquiry process; form groups; select roles.

Stop and analyze the process regularly.

Communicate and reflect on findings.

Page 33: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Service Learning

Service Learning is a teaching and learning method that enables students to link theory with action through guided reflection. It connects students to members of a community where they provide meaningful service that responds to community needs-as defined by the community.

Page 34: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Key Elements

Ethical and meaningful collaboration with the communityMeaningful integration of service into the courseOngoing reflection on the ethical, intercultural and interdisciplinary implications of the service experienceIntegrative journals

Page 35: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Learning Communities

“A variety of approaches that link or cluster classes during a given term around an interdisciplinary theme, that enroll a common cohort of students” (McGregor, Smith, Matthews, Gabelnick).

Page 36: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

LC Models

Living-Learning Communities

Freshman Interest Groups (FIGS)

Federated Learning Communities (FLC)

Paired, Linked, Clustered Courses

Team-Taught Courses

Coordinated Studies

Page 37: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Small Group Work

Imagine a course on poverty.

How might it be structured as a team-taught course?

Or an ID service-learning course?

An ID inquiry-based course?

An ID cooperative learning course?

An ID learning community?

Choose one approach to imagine.

Page 38: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Short-Term ApproachesOne-minute papersClass minutesChange your mind debatesHot cornersVisual thinkingFish bowl

Panel of disciplinary expertsCourse mapsCase studiesAnalysis of video or magazine (ask students to identify disciplinary contributions)

Page 39: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Sample Syllabus

What are its strengths?

Its weaknesses?

Page 40: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Questions to Consider:Is the course focused (e.g., problem, historical moment, text, geographical region, or key concept)? Does the focus lend itself to interdisciplinary inquiry? Are the perspectives of disciplines explicit? Are the learning outcomes articulated? Do they relate to interdisciplinarity?Is the course multidisciplinary, cross-disciplinary, adisciplinary or interdisciplinary?

Page 41: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Additional Questions

Is there a “hook” at the beginning?

Is the structure of the course clear? Do it steadily advance the understanding of the issue?

Are the assignments, activities, readings consistent with the developmental level of the students?

Is the pedagogy(ies) appropriate for advancing course outcomes?

Where does integration happen in the course?

Page 42: Designing and Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses Workshop for UMBC Faculty June 6, 2005.

Final Thoughts

What additional questions do you have?

Next, we will work on teaching interdisciplinary writing and creating effective assignments.

If you have an assignment or an assignment sequence that you would like feedback on, please bring 3-4 copies of it to share.