A focus on interdisciplinarity in teaching

Learn how to break higher education out of its silos through course design, assessment and lessons adapted to the real world

Interdisciplinarity in teaching spotlight

Interdisciplinarity, the crossing of traditional boundaries between academic disciplines to advance understanding of a complex world, is lauded as the salve to wicked problems, such as climate change and disease, and multifaceted real-world questions. When embedded in curricula and course design, interdisciplinary teaching enables students to step back from the narrow lens of one subject specialism and get a broader understanding of how things work in practice. It can augment engineering or healthcare, for example, with insights from the social sciences or humanities. But such ambitious cross-disciplinary goals must overcome culture clashes and difficulties around assessment, accreditation and pedagogy. This collection offers advice for instructional design, inter-faculty collaboration, inclusive classrooms and integrating technology to advance the mission of interdisciplinarity.

Can you teach interdisciplinarity in 10 weeks?

Interdisciplinarity is an ambitious and rewarding research process, but how realistic can we be in a 10-week module? Here is how to frame the task, structure the process and balance workloads

Simon Scott

University of Birmingham