According to this book, interdisciplinary pedagogy is not synonymous with a single process, set of skills, method, or technique. Instead, it is concerned primarily with fostering in students a sense of self-authorship and a notion of knowledge that they can use to respond to complex questions, issues, or problems.
Most faculty members have disciplinary terminal degrees, little preparation for teaching, and previous experience learning and teaching solely in disciplinary classroom settings. This collection is designed to assist both new and experienced faculty members who are teaching in interdisciplinary settings and who want to advance integrative learning with their students, as well as administrators who want to encourage integrative and interdisciplinary teaching in their institutions. The contributors offer many intriguing approaches for achieving the goals of the interdisciplinary pedagogy.
Author(s): Carolyn Haynes; Association for Integrative Studies
Series: ACE/Oryx Series on Higher Education
Publisher: Oryx Press / American Council on Education
Year: 2002
Language: English
Pages: xxii,295
Acknowledgments
About the Editor and Contributors
Introduction: Laying a Foundation for Interdisciplinary Teaching
Part I: Standard Approaches to Interdisciplinary Teaching
Part II: Innovative Approaches to Interdisciplinary Teaching
Part III: Applying One Disciplinary-Based Pedagogy to Interdisciplinary Teaching
Part IV: Interdisciplinary Teaching in Different Settings or to Different Students
Conclusion: Achieving Interdisciplinary Innovation: Leading and Learning in Community
Index