Leading Interdisciplinary Work in Australia and the UK Paul Blackmore Camille B. Kandiko SRHE Annual Conference 2008 Valuing Higher Education 9-11 December.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
EU Presidency Conference Effective policies for the development of competencies of youth in Europe Warsaw, November 2011 Improving basic skills in.
Advertisements

Chapter 5 Transfer of Training
Developing interdisciplinary understanding for MYP teachers
The 1 st National Quality Assurance Conference November 17-18, 2011 Student Feedback on Teaching and Learning at The University of the West Indies, St.
Science Subject Leader Training
The Role of Research and Writing in Career Advancement Carmel Parker White, Ph.D. Kansas State University.
Department of Education Effective science education for innovation Robin Millar.
OECD Conf Mexico)_JB 9 December Presentation by: John Bangs, Assistant Secretary (Education, Equality and Professional Development) National Union.
NCATS REDESIGN METHODOLOGY A Menu of Redesign Options Six Models for Course Redesign Five Principles of Successful Course Redesign Four Models for Assessing.
1 When DAP Meets GAP Promoting Peaceful Coexistence between Developmentally Appropriate Practice & the Need to Address the Achievement Gap International.
1. 2 Choosing and preparing for a career is the most challenging developmental task of all for the late adolescent and young adult. It is essential for.
An Overview of the Parallel Curriculum Model
California Preschool Learning Foundations
DRDP Measure Slides by Domain
Preschool Learning Foundations and Curriculum Framework, Volume 2
Illinois Department of Children and Family Services, Pathways to Strengthening and Supporting Families Program April 15, 2010 Division of Service Support,
BUILDING THE CAPACITY TO ACHIEVE HEALTH & LEARNING OUTCOMES
Career and College Readiness Kentucky Core Academic Standards Characteristics of Highly Effective Teaching and Learning Assessment Literacy MODULE 1.
Assessment Literacy Kentucky Core Academic Standards Characteristics of Highly Effective Teaching and Learning Career and College Readiness MODULE 1.
National Academy of Engineering of the National Academies 1 Phase II: Educating the 2020 Engineer Phase II: Adapting Engineering Education to the New Century...
Year 6 mental test 5 second questions
Graduateness, Transdisciplinarity and Work-Based Learning Dr Anita Walsh Senior Lecturer in Work-Based Learning
1 Aberdeen City Probationer Teacher Induction Programme.
Interdisciplinary leadership as leading learning
Interdisciplinary leadership Paul Blackmore Camille B. Kandiko Kings Learning Institute, Kings College London.
Enabling Interdisciplinarity Interdisciplinarity Project Kings Learning Institute Kings College, London.
Institutionalising Interdisciplinary Work in Australia and the UK Prof Paul Blackmore & Dr Camille B Kandiko Kings Learning Institute, Kings College London.
American Society for Quality Certification Programs Presented 21 July 2009 by Diane G. Kulisek
1 Implementing Internet Web Sites in Counseling and Career Development James P. Sampson, Jr. Florida State University Copyright 2003 by James P. Sampson,
School Leadership that Works:
HE in FE: The Higher Education Academy and its Subject Centres Ian Lindsay Academic Advisor HE in FE.
1) Eliminate the COD graduation ceremony. Using budget issues is a great opportunity to discontinue this event. If doing this, let students know in plenty.
Presenter: Beresford Riley, Government of
Survey Responses Challenges and Opportunities Matt Richey St. Olaf College.
The Roles of a Sports Coach
Designing an education for life after university: Some strategies CHEC, South Africa March 2011 A/PROF SIMON BARRIE, THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY.
1 Quality Indicators for Device Demonstrations April 21, 2009 Lisa Kosh Diana Carl.
Reform and Innovation in Higher Education
2 |SharePoint Saturday New York City
Promoting Regulatory Excellence Self Assessment & Physiotherapy: the Ontario Model Jan Robinson, Registrar & CEO, College of Physiotherapists of Ontario.
The Intentional Teacher
© 2012 National Heart Foundation of Australia. Slide 2.
Denise Kirkpatrick Director, Learning & Teaching Learning together online: towards an understanding of online collaboration.
1 I am a Community Health Nurse A package for Community Health Nurse practitioners in Western Australia The Community Health Nurse Western Australia Inc.
1 of 35 Dr. Anne Adams Esteem Dissemination.
The Open University A Case Study
Science as a Process Chapter 1 Section 2.
Understanding Generalist Practice, 5e, Kirst-Ashman/Hull
MYP planning: the unit planner
“How will the new Primary Curriculum affect my school
Introduction to Coaching and Mentoring
Student Survey
H to shape fully developed personality to shape fully developed personality for successful application in life for successful.
Flexible Assessment, Tools and Resources for PLAR Get Ready! Go! Presenter: Deb Blower, PLAR Facilitator Red River College of Applied Arts, Science and.
Maths Counts Insights into Lesson Study
©Brooks/Cole, 2001 Chapter 12 Derived Types-- Enumerated, Structure and Union.
Chapter 12 Leaders and Leadership
1 Phase III: Planning Action Developing Improvement Plans.
Intracellular Compartments and Transport
PSSA Preparation.
Essential Cell Biology
Organization Theory and Health Services Management
1 Strengthening Teaching and Learning: Educational Leadership and Professional Standards SABES Directors’ Institute July 2011.
1 Literacy PERKS Standard 1: Aligned Curriculum. 2 PERKS Essential Elements Academic Performance 1. Aligned Curriculum 2. Multiple Assessments 3. Instruction.
Matt Moxham EDUC 290. The Idaho Core Teacher Standards are ten standards set by the State of Idaho that teachers are expected to uphold. This is because.
Critical Characteristics of Situated Learning: Implications for the Instructional Design of Multimedia Herrington, J., & Oliver, R. (1995). Critical Characteristics.
Chapter 1 Defining Social Studies. Chapter 1: Defining Social Studies Thinking Ahead What do you associate with or think of when you hear the words social.
A Focus on Health and Wellbeing Wendy Halliday Learning and Teaching Scotland.
My research questions What are academics’ perceptions of the influences on their curriculum decisions? What are the drivers that support and inhibit.
Presentation transcript:

Leading Interdisciplinary Work in Australia and the UK Paul Blackmore Camille B. Kandiko SRHE Annual Conference 2008 Valuing Higher Education 9-11 December 2008 Liverpool, UK

2 Outline of presentation Project and methodology Defining disciplines and leadership Leadership as leading learning Findings Conclusions

3

4

5

6

7 The project Increasing calls for interdisciplinarity But Structural Socio-cultural Epistemological differences Some leaders engage - why and how?

8 Methodology Literature review Ten in-depth semi-structured interviews of interdisciplinary leaders at KCL and Melbourne Appreciative inquiry why engage? what works? principles for effective practice

9 Framework Jarzabkowskis (2005) activity-based strategy as practice method Practice: Interdisciplinarity as a situated, socially accomplished flow of organizational activity Practices: Administrative, discursive, episodic Practitioners: Skilled, knowledgeable actors inside and outside the university

10 A discipline any comparatively self-contained and isolated domain of human experience which possesses its own community of experts (Nissani, 1997) Knowledge, methodology, community

11 Interdisciplinarity a means of solving problems and answering questions that cannot be satisfactorily addressed using single methods or approaches (Klein, 1990) Requires integration

12 Leadership Distributed and embedded in context much of the work of leading is contingent … it involves dealing with the specifics of a time, a place and a set of people (Knight & Trowler, 2001)

13 System level - funding Difficulties writing interdisciplinary grants Fitting interdisciplinary work into national assessment schemes (RAE in UK) Challenges of aligning interdisciplinary work with national funding councils

14 Institution level - recognition Issues with traditional discipline-based reward systems: mode of publication: e.g. government report rather than journal article or book location of publication: generalist rather than specialist journal time frame: interdisciplinary work takes time to develop publication in peer-reviewed journals using unfamiliar literatures A risky business best left till later?

15 Faculty, school, department level Tribal academic disciplines Administrative issues: finance course registration time-tabling computer systems It is quite difficult to teach interdisciplinary courses … with different timetables, for instance, or different habits, different expectations, different cultures, perhaps of contact, or different entry level requirements.

16 Leadership as leading learning Learning takes place within communities of practice and activity systems that have their own sub-cultures and discursive repertoires Knight and Trowler (2001) on leadership at departmental level

17 Learning Tacit (Polanyi, 1966) Social (Bandura, 1977) Situated (Lave & Wenger, 1991) a dialectical model of learning in which individual and context interact in critical ways…and…are mutually constitutive (Lattuca, 2002)

18 Identity and power The community provides the language in which individuals understand themselves and interpret their world (Henkel, 2000) Self identity a reflexively organised endeavour … which consists in the sustaining of coherent, yet continuously revised, biographical narratives (Giddens, 1991)

19 Habitus a system of shared dispositions and cognitive structures which generates perceptions, appreciations and actions (Bourdieu, 1988)

20 Foucault and power Discipline is a type of power, a modality for its exercise, comprising a whole set of instruments, techniques, procedures, levels of application, targets; it is a physics' or an 'anatomy' of power, a technology" ( Foucault, 1977) "Power is exercised only over free subjects, and only insofar as they are free" ( Foucault, 1982)

21 Adair (1984) on leadership Individual Team Task

22 Leading interdisciplinary learning Identity Disciplines Learning

23 Broader purposes How do you make democracy work in an age of science-mediated risk … its actually sitting at the biggest questions we face … how we manage expert knowledge in a democracy the practical application and the notion that my ideas are likely to be taken up quickly … is one of the things that appeals to me

24 Intellectual possibilities other ways of understanding the world, which are powerful and which can help demanding and more ambitious … – its a leadership challenge – a way of bringing a variety of perspectives together in a coherent organised fashion a mental framework on which you can hang things … more things in far fewer tasks, with a simpler context tremendously stimulating for yourself as a teacher or a writer, to be writing for a discipline other than your own

25 Establishing relationships you talk to people and you engage with their arguments respect other people who also bother to go into primary resources, primary materials, who can argue with contrary points of view without being immediately judgemental. … play the argument; dont play the person unconditional respect for the disciplines that the person represents … a real interest in their work, their proposal, what motivates them and the kinds of concerns that they express in regard to a collaboration

26 Building a team Collegial - crossing functional boundaries its about empowering them, to get those things running, and then … knitting those back together again they worked in that area for intellectual rewards, academic rewards, so it needs a more democratic approach I dont necessarily lead them. I see myself as support staff. … I try to be as interactive as I can. I comment on the drafts. I go to meetings. I talk about issues You can all bring your expertise in, but at least you need to be running in the same direction … a matter of the co-ordination of peoples understandings

27 Motivating others Issues to deal with: Individual researchers absorbed by their own individual projects. Career preparation of faculty within a discipline Research and professional bodies with their embedded interests Interdisciplinarity not itself a driving force. Is there a career interdisciplinarian? Interest in the subject should be the driver

28 Intellectual environment Ensuring that each participating department has a representative Balancing the views of small and large groups Making space to review terminology - precise language not jargon Using a vocabulary that embraces a wide audience Valuing alternative disciplinary views in articles

29 Physical environment … if you want research, the structure has to be flexible and informal … if we can sort out where to put the coffee rooms and the toilets, the rest will follow a very impressive group … but we all disappear again, and nobody talks to one another … weve got so much knowledge here, but the co-ordination and managing of it, never mind the social or personal side, is quite dispersed

30 Organisational environment Importance of early training in enabling transfer potential How safe to take a risk? Research assessment disincentive Institutional recognition

31 Leading interdisciplinary learning Identity Individual Learning Purposes Possibilities Motivation Environment Engagement Identity – Influenced by discipline Career stage Recognition and reward Disciplines Epistemological Cultural Linguistic Political aspects

32 Acknowledgement This study was funded in part through a grant from the Leadership Foundation for Higher Education.

33 References Adair, J. (1984). The skills of leadership. Aldershot: Gower. Bandura, A. (1977). Social learning theory. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall. Bourdieu, P. (1988). Homo academicus. Cambridge: Polity Press. Foucault, M. (1982). Afterword: The subject and power. In H. L. Dreyfus & P. Rabinow, Michel Foucault: Beyond structuralism and hermeneutics (pp ). Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. Foucault, M. (1977). Discipline and punish: The birth of the prison. Trans. Alan Sheridan. New York: Pantheon. Giddens, A. (1991). Modernity and self-identity: Self and society in the late modern age. Cambridge: Polity. Henkel, M. (2000). Academic identities and policy change in higher education. London: Jessica Kingsley. Jarzabkowski, P. (2005). Strategy as practice. London: Sage. Klein, J. T. (1990). Interdisciplinarity: History, theory, and practice. Detroit: Wayne State University Press.

34 References Lattuca, L. (2002). Learning interdisciplinarity: Socio-cultural perspectives on academic work. Journal of Higher Education, 73(6), 711–739. Lave, J. & Wenger, E. (1991). Situated learning: Legitimate peripheral participation. Cambridge: University of Cambridge Press. Nissani, M. (1997). Ten cheers for interdisciplinarity: The case for interdisciplinary knowledge and research. The Social Science Journal, 34(2), Knight, P. & Trowler, P. (2001). Departmental leadership in higher education: New directions for communities of practice. Buckingham: Open University Press. Polanyi, M. (1966). The tacit dimension. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. Ramsden, P. (1998). Learning to lead in higher education. London: Routledge Falmer.

35 Questions? Contact information: Camille B. Kandiko Kings Learning Institute Kings College London, UK Thank you!