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How Interdisciplinary Research Is Changing the World – And Why?

How Interdisciplinary Research Is Changing the World – And Why?. Allen F. Repko, University of British Columbia 2010. Introduction. I. The emerging consensus on what interdisciplinarity is and its relationship to integration, How interdisciplinary research

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How Interdisciplinary Research Is Changing the World – And Why?

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  1. How Interdisciplinary Research Is Changing the World – And Why? Allen F. Repko, University of British Columbia 2010

  2. Introduction I. The emerging consensus on what interdisciplinarity is and its relationship to integration, How interdisciplinary research and learning is changing the world and why III. Headwinds and hopeful developments for interdisciplinary research and learning.

  3. Introduction The recent publication of several books on IDS show that the growing and diverse field of interdisciplinary studies has finally come of age: 1. Peter Weingart and Nico Stehr’s (Eds.) (2000) Practising Interdisciplinarity 2. Carol S. Palmer’s (2001) Work at the Boundaries of Science

  4. Introduction 3. Rick Szostak’s (2004) Classifying Science: Phenomena, Data, Theory, Method, Practice 4.The National Academies’ (2005) Facilitating Interdisciplinary Research 5.Sheron J. Derry, Christian D. Shunn, and Morton Ann Gernsbacher (Eds). (2005), Interdisciplinary Collaboration: An Emerging Cognitive Science

  5. Introduction 6. John Atkinson and Malcolm Crowe (Eds.) (2006), Interdisciplinary Research: Diverse Approaches in Science, Technology, Health and Society 7. Tress et al (2005), From Landscape Research to Landscape Planning: Aspects of Integration Education and Application 8. Repko’s (2008) Interdisciplinary Research: Process and Theory

  6. Introduction 9. Szostak’s (2009) The Causes of Economic Growth: Interdisciplinary Perspectives 10. The Oxford Handbook on Interdisciplinarity (forthcoming) 11. Repko, Szostak, and Newell (Eds.) (2011) Interdisciplinary Research: Case Studies of Integrative Understandings of Complex Problems

  7. I. DEFINING IDS Reasons for Agreeing on a Definition of Interdisciplinary Studies 1. To make the case that IDS is, in fact, contributing something distinctive and valuable to the academy and to society at large

  8. I. DEFINING IDS Reasons for Agreeing on a Definition of Interdisciplinary Studies 2. To establish best research practices, engage in theory development, and produce meaningful research products.

  9. I. DEFINING IDS Reasons for Agreeing on a Definition of Interdisciplinary Studies 3. To achieve greater depth and sophistication in the teaching of interdisciplinarity.

  10. I. DEFINING IDS • Reasons for Agreeing on a Definition of Interdisciplinary Studies 4. To facilitate meaningful assessment of student work and program effectiveness

  11. I. DEFINING IDS • Reasons for Agreeing on a Definition of Interdisciplinary Studies 5.To create common ground among practitioners and thereby communicate effectively across different knowledge domains 6. To enhance student morale.

  12. I. DEFINING IDS B. Two Conceptions of IDS 1. Generalists: understand IDS loosely to mean “any form of dialog or interaction between two or more disciplines” while minimizing, obscuring, or rejecting altogether the role of integration

  13. I. DEFINING IDS • Integration is a process by which ideas, data and information, methods, tools, concepts and/or theories from two or more disciplines are synthesized, connected, or blended (Klein, 2011)

  14. I. DEFINING IDS B. Two Conceptions of IDS (cont’d) 2. Integrationists:stress the priority of integration and are concerned with developing a distinctively interdisciplinary theory-based research process and describing how it operates

  15. I. DEFINING IDS C. Prominent Definitions of IDS 1. Klein and Newell (1997) 2. The National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medicine(2005) 3. Veronica Boix Mansilla (2005) 4. Diana Rhoten et al (2006) 5. National Science Foundation (2009)

  16. I. DEFINING IDS D. Elements These Definitions Share • IDS research has a particular substantive focus • This focus extends beyond a single disciplinary perspective • A distinctive characteristic of IDS is that it focuses on a problem or question that is complex

  17. I. DEFINING IDS D. Elements These Definitions Share (cont’d) • IDS research is characterized by an identifiable process or mode of inquiry • IDS research draws explicitly on the disciplines • The disciplines provide insights into the specific substantive focus of interdisciplinary research

  18. I. DEFINING IDS D. Elements These Definitions Share (cont’d) • IDS research involves integration • The objective of integration is pragmatic: to a produce a cognitive advancement in the form of a new understanding, a new product, or a new meaning [Note: The term meaning is important in the humanities, where it is often equated with the intent of the author or artist (Bal, 2002, p. 27)

  19. I. DEFINING IDS E. An Integrated Definition “Interdisciplinary studies is 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, and draws on disciplinary perspectives and integrates their insights to produce a cognitive advancement.” (Repko, 2008, p. 12)

  20. II. HOW & WHY IDS RESEARCH & LEARNING ARE CHANGING THE WORLD • How 1. IDS is an incubator of new academic fields: e.g., • environmental & sustainability studies, • cultural analysis, • criminal justice studies • aural architecture • urban and policy studies • crime and justice studies • sociological cultural studies • visual culture • ethnomusicology

  21. II. HOW & WHY IDS RESEARCH & LEARNING ARE CHANGING THE WORLD A. How 2. IDS is producing new understandings of complex social problems and cultural phenomena: Examples: a. The Center for the Study of Co-operatives at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon. b. Stuart Henry’s (2009) interdisciplinary study of Social Deviance c. Mieke Bal’s pioneering work

  22. II. HOW & WHY IDS RESEARCH & LEARNING ARE CHANGING THE WORLD A. How 3. The rise of transdisciplinarity: Two strands: a. collaborations between academic researchers and industrial/private sectors for the purpose of product and technology development b. academic experts collaborating with social actors who have local knowledge and contextual interests to achieve democratic solutions to complex problems such as sustainability and risks of technological modernizations such as nuclear power plants

  23. II. HOW & WHY IDS RESEARCH & LEARNING ARE CHANGING THE WORLD B. Why: Drivers of Interdisciplinarity 1. The interconnectedness and interdependence of our world—Friedman (2005): The World is Flat a. not only is the world’s economic activity increasingly connected and interdependent (with the rise of the Internet and telecommunications infrastructure), but so are the world’s problems b. Friedman (2005): “If you don’t visit the bad neighborhoods, the bad neighborhoods are going to visit you.”

  24. II. HOW & WHY IDS RESEARCH & LEARNING ARE CHANGING THE WORLD 2. Problems are complex and ill-structured a. Two kinds of complexity: real-world problems that involve (1) natural systems and human society, and the complexity associated with (2)the meaning of cultural artifacts, past and present, such as literature, visual art (e.g., films, paintings, sculptures, multimedia), and performance art (e.g., plays, dance, and musical compositions). b. Job complexity c. The application of systems theory to complex problems d. Business

  25. II. HOW & WHY IDS RESEARCH & LEARNING ARE CHANGING THE WORLD • 3. The need to solve persisting societal problems • IDS community development projects in urban and rural areas typically involve workers from various disciplines and institutions who join forces around complex social issues of mutual concern such as poverty, health, housing, the environment…. • International university-to-university partnerships: E.g., George Mason University, the National Autonomous University of Honduras, and the University of Costa Rica—working on domestic violence

  26. II. HOW & WHY IDS RESEARCH & LEARNING ARE CHANGING THE WORLD 4. The location of basic research problems are at the interfaces of disciplines a. Klein: “hybridization” b. E. O. Wilson (1998) “consilience” c. Elias Zerhouni (2003), NIH Roadmap for Medical Research, d. The American Advancement of Science’s CEO Alan I. Leshner (2004) e. Denise Caruso & Diana Rhoten (2001)

  27. II. HOW & WHY IDS RESEARCH & LEARNING ARE CHANGING THE WORLD f. But Szostak (2007) cautions: The hope is that interdisciplinarity will advance not so much as revolutionary science (to use Kuhn’s terminology), but as normal science: “identifying weaknesses in existing insights, searching for compensating insights from other communities of scholars, ...and striving to overcome disagreements between disciplinary insights” (p. 12).

  28. II. HOW & WHY IDS RESEARCH & LEARNING ARE CHANGING THE WORLD 5. The need to produce revolutionary insights and generative technologies a. Revolutionary insights: ideas that have the capacity to transform how we learn, think, and produce new knowledge b. Generative technologies: those whose novelty and power not only find applications of great value but also have the capacity to transform existing disciplines and generate new ones” (p. 35).

  29. II. HOW & WHY IDS RESEARCH & LEARNING ARE CHANGING THE WORLD 5. The need to produce revolutionary insights and generative technologies (cont’d) c. Producing transformative insights and technologies requires what Robert J. Sternberg (1996) calls “successful intelligence.” d. IDS learning fosters the development of “successful intelligence.” Marc Spooner (2004): the interdisciplinary research process, as it is generally conceptualized, facilitates the creative process by ignoring or removing or altering disciplinary constraints that otherwise would make interdisciplinary work impossible. In fact, says Spooner, the research process may itself be fruitfully understood as a form of creativity (p. 86).

  30. II. HOW & WHY IDS RESEARCH & LEARNING ARE CHANGING THE WORLD 6. The need for integrative thinking a. Joel Podolny, former Dean of Yale’s Business School: “Effective leaders need to be able to own and frame problems…then work across organizational boundaries in order to solve those problems. The curriculum in the past was broken down by these disciplinary silos and because of that, got in the way of effective management and leadership….The real value to be added is in working across those silos” (Business Week, September 12, 2006).

  31. II. HOW & WHY IDS RESEARCH & LEARNING ARE CHANGING THE WORLD 6. The need for integrative thinking b. Howard Gardner’s Five Minds for the Future (2008). “Against all odds,” says Gardner, “individuals seek synthesis.” The “most ambitious form of synthesis occurs in interdisciplinary work.”

  32. III. HEADWINDS & HOPEFUL DEVELOPMENTS • HEADWINDS 1. Culture Clash 2. “We’re already doing it” 3. IDS = Postmodernism 4. Misinformation 5. Other

  33. III. HEADWINDS & HOPEFUL DEVELOPMENTS B. HOPEFUL DEVELOPMENTS 1. Renewed interest in IDS research and education 2. Integration is widely regarded as the primary methodology of IDS 3. Funding opportunities for IDS research

  34. III. HEADWINDS & HOPEFUL DEVELOPMENTS B. HOPEFUL DEVELOPMENTS 4. The “webbing of knowledge” 5. The Development of an empirically grounded targeted assessment rubric 6. The collection of case studies on the IDS research process (forthcoming in 2011)

  35. CONCLUSION • IDS must produce • IDS must co-exist • The great challenges confronting today’s scholarship is beyond the ability of any one approach—disciplinary, interdisciplinary, or transdisciplinary—to resolve. Let us work towards creating common ground as we seek to improve the human condition.

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