About: Interdisciplinary teaching is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 748 publications have been published within this topic receiving 6504 citations.
TL;DR: In an ever changing society of the 21st century, there is a demand to equip students with meta competences going beyond cognitive knowledge education, therefore, needs a transition from transferring knowledge to developing individual potentials with the help of constructivist learning as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: In an ever changing society of the 21st century, there is a
demand to equip students with meta competences going
beyond cognitive knowledge Education, therefore, needs
a transition from transferring knowledge to developing
individual potentials with the help of constructivist learning
Advantages of constructivist learning, and criteria for its
realisation have been well-determined through theoretical
findings in pedagogy (Reich 2008, de Corte, OECD
2010) However, the practical implementation leaves a lot
to be desired (Gardner 2010, Wagner 2011) Knowledge
acquisition is still fragmented into isolated subjects Lesson
layouts are not efficiently designed to help teachers
execute a holistic and interdisciplinary learning As is
shown in this paper, teachers are having negative
classroom experience with project work or interdisciplinary
teaching, due to a constant feeling of uncertainty and
chaos, as well as lack of a process to follow We therefore
conclude: there is a missing link between theoretical
findings and demands by pedagogy science and its
practical implementation We claim that, Design Thinking
as a team-based learning process offers teachers support
towards practice-oriented and holistic modes of
constructivist learning in projects Our case study confirms
an improvement of classroom experience for teacher and
student alike when using Design Thinking This leads to a
positive attitude towards constructivist learning and an
increase of its implementation in education The ultimate
goal of this paper is to prove that Design Thinking gets
teachers empowered to facilitate constructivist learning in
order to foster 21st century skills
TL;DR: This study investigated how stakeholders in a newly integrated curriculum – students, course directors and curriculum leaders – define integration and perceive its successes and challenges during its first year.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE Recent educational reform in US medical schools has created integrated curricular structures. This study investigated how stakeholders in a newly integrated curriculum - students, course directors and curriculum leaders - define integration and perceive its successes and challenges during its first year. METHODS We conducted interviews with curriculum reform leaders, course directors and first year medical students. Interview transcripts were analysed for themes, which were compared within and across stakeholder groups. RESULTS Three curriculum leaders, four Year 1 course directors and six Year 1 medical students were interviewed. Fifteen students participated in a group interview. Four major themes emerged: interdisciplinary teaching; interdisciplinary faculty collaboration; building curricular links, and sequencing and framing curricular content. Cross-group analysis revealed participant agreement that an integrated curriculum required interdisciplinary teaching, clinical application and careful oversight. Differences among groups were also identified. Faculty (course directors and curriculum leaders) discussed faculty collaboration and the challenges of faculty buy-in and course implementation. Students highlighted the impact of integration on their learning and the challenges of sequencing and scaffolding content. Both students and course directors focused on course monitoring and conceptual links for student learning. CONCLUSIONS Integrating a curriculum is a complex process. It is differentially understood and experienced by students and faculty, and can refer to instructional method, content, faculty work or synthesis of knowledge in the minds of learners. It can occur at different rates and some subjects are integrated more easily than others. We point to some specific considerations as medical schools embark on curriculum reform.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the use of the framework for the collaborative medical and nursing management of a surgical patient with complications and found that both medical and nurse groups' perceptions of the design features of the collaborative simulation were positive.
Abstract: Collaborative interdisciplinary learning is a core educational requirement cited by the Institute of Medicine Health Professions Education Report (2003). This descriptive study supports the Nursing Education Simulation Framework for designing simulations used as an interdisciplinary teaching strategy in health professions curricula. The purpose of this study was to investigate the use of the framework for the collaborative medical and nursing management of a surgical patient with complications. Simulation design features, student satisfaction, and self-confidence were measured. Results indicate both medical and nursing student groups' perceptions of the design features of the collaborative simulation were positive. Feedback and guided reflection were identified by both student groups as important simulation design features. Data analyzed from the Collaboration Scale suggest that designing simulations that place medical and nursing students together is beneficial for both the medical students and ...
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the change in attitudes to interdisciplinary teaching of 29 self-selected middle and high school teachers who participated in a professional development workshop and in delivering a 12-15-week inter-disciplinary teaching and design problem unit that spanned multiple STEM subjects.
Abstract: Integrating engineering and technology concepts into K-12 science and math curricula through engineering design project-based learning has been found to increase students’ interest in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM), however preparing teachers to shift to interdisciplinary teaching remains a significant challenge. Primarily teachers need to develop both skills and attitudes toward interdisciplinary teaching. In doing so, professional development (PD) is considered a key component in helping teachers through this transformation process. In an educational environment of accountability, measuring the effects of PD programs on teacher behaviors and capacity is essential but often elusive. The current study describes the change in attitudes to interdisciplinary teaching of 29 self-selected middle and high school teachers who participated a PD workshop and in delivering a 12–15 week interdisciplinary teaching and design problem unit that spanned multiple STEM subjects. This quasi-experimental pilot study implemented a single group pretest–posttest design using survey methods to collect data from the participants at two intervals; at the time of the PD workshop and at the completion of the teaching unit that emphasized a long-term engineering design problem. The goals of this research are to (1) assess the changes in attitudes to interdisciplinary teaching, attitudes to teamwork, teaching satisfaction, and resistance to change, (2) explore relationships among these changes, (3) and describe the variation in these changes across teachers’ gender, school level, discipline taught, and education level.