Interdisciplinarity: An Introduction: Michael Seipel, PH.D., Truman State University, Kirksville, Missouri
Interdisciplinarity: An Introduction: Michael Seipel, PH.D., Truman State University, Kirksville, Missouri
Interdisciplinarity: An Introduction: Michael Seipel, PH.D., Truman State University, Kirksville, Missouri
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Klein, Julie Thompson and William H. Newell. "Advancing Interdisciplinary Studies." Pp. 3-22 in
Interdisciplinarity: Essays from the Literature, William H. Newell, editor. New York: College Entrance
Examination Board, 1998: 3.
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Interdisciplinarity: An Introduction
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Interdisciplinarity: An Introduction
Multidisciplinary analysis
draws on the knowledge of several
disciplines, each of which provides a “Composition II Term
different perspective on a problem or Paper on Architecture”
issue. Nationally, Women's Studies
Disciplines used: Architecture, Educational
and African/African-American
Studies programs are often based on Psychology
a multidisciplinary model. For This senior author examines, “…how teaching
example, Truman’s Women’s philosophy may influence the design of a school,
Studies Minor allows students to and how the design may affect teaching styles in
choose classes from a number of
the future.” The author notes how the dominant
disciplines, including English,
History, Sociology, Art, Theatre, teaching philosophies at the beginning of the
Communications, and Philosophy 20th century, which cast the teacher as the
and Religion. In multidisciplinary unquestioned authority, influenced school and
analysis, each discipline makes a classroom design: “As indicated by these
contribution to the overall traditional approaches, in the early to mid
understanding of the issue, but in a 1900s, teaching consisted of a single teacher
primarily additive fashion. Students lecturing 20 to 30 students (Gross, 20).
must then make the connections Students were seated in methodical rows and
between the various disciplinary
tried to soak up as much information as
contributions.
possible.” Then, “After this educational reform
Interdisciplinary analysis began to set in, in the mid 1950s, school design
requires integration of knowledge changed drastically.” To examine the
from the disciplines being brought to
relationship between teaching style and school
bear on an issue. Disciplinary
knowledge, concepts, tools, and rules design, the author compares the old Kirksville
of investigation are considered, High School, constructed in 1914, and the new
contrasted, and combined in such a one, built in 1960. The author evaluates the
way that the resulting understanding design of the two schools and interviews
is greater than simply the sum of its teachers who have taught in one or both schools.
disciplinary parts. However, the
focus on integration should not imply
that the outcome of interdisciplinary analysis will always be a neat, tidy solution in which all
contradictions between the alternative disciplines are resolved. Interdisciplinary study may
indeed be “messy”. However, contradictory conclusions and accompanying tensions between
disciplines may not only provide a fuller understanding, but could be seen as a healthy symptom
of interdisciplinarity. Analysis which works through these tensions and contradictions between
disciplinary systems of knowledge with the goal of synthesis—the creation of new knowledge—
often characterizes the richest interdisciplinary work.
Transdisciplinary analysis, in Stember's words, is "concerned with the unity of
intellectual frameworks beyond the disciplinary perspectives."2 It may deal with philosophical
2
Stember, Marilyn. "Advancing the Social Sciences Through the Interdisciplinary Enterprise." Pp. 337-350 in
Interdisciplinarity: Essays from the Literature, William H. Newell, editor. New York: College Entrance
Examination Board, 1998: 341.
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Interdisciplinarity: An Introduction
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Interdisciplinarity: An Introduction
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Interdisciplinarity: An Introduction
the tools and insights of history, art, and literature can enable the scholar to develop a more
complete "portrait" of a historical person or event.
Finally, the most important and overarching motivation for engaging in interdisciplinary
analysis in the JINS course is to give students practice doing something that they will need to do
in their professional careers and personal lives. The professional may be called on to prepare a
report that requires him or her to draw on existing knowledge from several fields without
becoming an expert in any one of those fields; the individual, as a participating member of a
democratic society, may have to evaluate "expert claims" being made by competing interest
groups in order to reach a voting decision. In either case, the practice of interdisciplinary
analysis would be helpful in assembling and evaluating the necessary information. In the past,
students have been left on their own to make these interconnections between disciplinary
knowledge bases. The JINS course provides students a chance to practice the art of
interdisciplinary analysis.
The “JINS” Course and the LSP3
Members of the Truman community have long been interested in cultivating the practice
of interdisciplinary thinking by students. The LAS Portfolio reading, as part of the overall
assessment process, gave faculty members the opportunity to see interdisciplinary work being
carried out by students from a variety of disciplines. The portfolio submissions also suggested a
need for more systematic preparation for students in the practice of interdisciplinary thinking.
The mission change of the University in 1985, from a regional state university to Missouri's
public liberal arts institution, provided further impetus for more formal attention to
interdisciplinary study in the undergraduate curriculum. The University community adopted a
Five-Year Plan to direct institutional changes to accomplish the new mission. External review
teams evaluating progress toward meeting this plan identified a need for more explicit
opportunities in the curriculum to make interdisciplinary connections and round out the liberal
arts experience.
Truman faculty and administrators responded by developing and adopting a Liberal
Studies Program (LSP) which includes a Junior Level Interdisciplinary Seminar (JINS) course.
The JINS course is positioned at the Junior level so that students will have fulfilled many of the
"Modes of Inquiry" requirements in the LSP, encountering, in the process, a variety of
disciplinary approaches to knowledge generation and evaluation. In the JINS course, students
will build on and integrate the insights of these various disciplines, as well as the subject matter,
concepts, or methods of their major discipline. The JINS course is, in many ways, the
centerpiece of the LSP and the linchpin between breadth of knowledge (the liberal arts) and
depth of knowledge (the major).
Getting Started with Interdisciplinary Analysis
Teachers of JINS courses ask students to demonstrate interdisciplinary analysis skills
through a variety of assignments. Although assignments will vary, as each JINS course is
independently developed and taught by an individual or faculty team, these simple suggestions
may help students select a topic of study or approach an assigned topic in an interdisciplinary
fashion.
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Based on Dennis Leavens, "A Brief History of the Incorporation of JINS into the LSP".
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Interdisciplinarity: An Introduction
• Select a topic of interest to you, that you won't mind investing a significant
amount of time and effort into researching and learning more about.
• Try to identify a problem, question, issue, or phenomenon that is complex enough
so that it would be difficult to address with the tools of only one discipline, one
which lends itself to being studied or understood from multiple perspectives.
• Then, focus your research on a manageable portion of that issue or problem. As
with any research effort, the real art of topic selection for this project is to strike a
balance between sufficient complexity on one hand (to be conducive to
interdisciplinary analysis) and sufficient focus on the other hand (to make the
project manageable and the results meaningful).
• If feasible, select a topic and approach that allows you to use your "home
discipline" (major) or at least draws on a discipline that is a core support area for
your major (as Economics is a support discipline for Business Administration).
This will give you a good starting point and base of knowledge for analyzing your
topic and make it easier to bring another discipline to bear on the topic. You can
do great interdisciplinary work without learning two disciplines from scratch.
• On the other hand, don’t be afraid to "stretch" or take a risk in your selection of
topic and disciplines. You may not want to select two disciplines in which you
have never had coursework as the bases for your analysis, but certainly selecting a
topic or one discipline that you have interest in but don't know much about can
make your project more intriguing.
• Examine the fundamentals of your chosen disciplines and the way those
disciplines' practitioners would approach a topic such as the one you’ve chosen.
What are the basic assumptions that the disciplines make about the world?; about
human nature?
• What methodologies are commonly used in the disciplines you have chosen?
What implications do these methodologies have for the types of investigation
carried out by practitioners of this discipline? What types and sources of data are
used in the disciplinary approaches chosen?
• Are there areas of disagreement or conflict between the different approaches
being used? Or are there major areas of agreement or complementarity in how the
disciplines approach the subject? Examining and highlighting these areas of
intersection between the different approaches can bring the interdisciplinary
potential of your topic to light.
Additional Reading
The Book of "Fours". The collection of student papers from which the summaries used in
this article are drawn. Available in Pickler Memorial Library.
Newell, William H. Interdisciplinarity: Essays from the Literature. New York: College
Entrance Examination Board (1998). Also available in PML.
i
I owe special thanks to Dr. Shirley Morahan for careful editing and helpful suggestions on earlier drafts of
this paper.
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